Phil has won the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MAPS) Faculty Teaching Award for 2011, shared with Prof Ted Johnson from the Department of Mathematics. The MAPS Faculty comprises the departments of Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Mathematics, Natural Sciences, Physics & Astronomy, Science & Technology Studies, Space & Climate Physics, Statistical Science and the London Centre for Nanotechnology, and the award is made annually in recognition of outstanding provision of teaching within the faculty. This year Phil was lecturing the course PHAS3443 Lasers & Modern Optics.
Monday, 20 June 2011
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
Nuffield Bursary Update
Throughout the course of her Nuffield Foundation project this summer' Ewa Karczewska will be making updates of her progress on our blog. Her first instalment is below.
Ewa writes: I have started this Nuffield Bursary project by studying the mechanical effect of evanescent optical fields on microscopic particles. I have learned how to set up simple optical path using optical mirrors and lenses, and most importantly I have understood the basic ideas behind the use of the laser light for optical trapping. Having been familiarised with the equipment in the laboratory and having been shown the experiment of array formation and optical binding in evanescent waves carried out by Marios Sergides, I have been using the heating and pulling method for making tapered optical fibres. With this method I have produced several optical fibres of less than 2μm in diameter. Using these fibres I will be trying to trap micron-sized spheres in the evanescent field, but first the efficiency of coupling and light transmission into the fibre must be improved. To do this I have learned how to polish and connectorize optical fibres and measured the transmission efficiency.
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Tapered glass optical fibre with 2 micron polystyrene spheres |
Thursday, 9 June 2011
UCL Science Centre Lecture
On Friday 10 June Phil is giving a lecture for the UCL Science Centre on Fifty Years of the Laser. The UCL Science Centre organises a series of lectures aimed at 6th form students (and their teachers) on a wide variety of subjects.
Abstract: In this lecture we will review the history of the laser: from Einstein's early predictions about "amplified light", through their invention fifty years ago, when they were considered "a solution looking for a problem", to their widespread use today in applications such as telecommunications and holography. Along the way we will highlight some of the fascinating science and technology that the invention of the laser has made possible, and also showcase some of the current research from the UCL Department of Physics that uses lasers to trap and manipulate particles, to cool matter to nearly absolute zero or to probe the structure and function of biological molecules that are fundamental to life.
Lectures take place at 6.30pm in the Harrie Massey Lecture Theatre and last for 60 minutes, followed by a 30 minute question-and-answer session.
Lectures take place at 6.30pm in the Harrie Massey Lecture Theatre and last for 60 minutes, followed by a 30 minute question-and-answer session.
Tuesday, 31 May 2011
New group members
Ewa Karczewska is joining the UCL Optical Tweezers Group today for an eight week research project funded by the Nuffield Foundation. The foundation provides research bursaries for undergraduate students considering a career in research to gain experience in a research lab over the summer vacation. The Optical Twezeers Group has peviously hosted three Nuffield bursary students: Muddassar Rashid (2008), Alex Dunning (2009) and Radhika Patel (2010).
Monday, 16 May 2011
Andrei Rode visit and seminar
This week Prof Andrei Rode from the Laser Physics Centre of the Australian National University, Canberra is visiting. While here he will also be giving an AMOP Physics seminar on Optical vortices: Trapping of particles and material processing.
Abstract: In physics and biology, manipulation of microscopic objects achieved remarkable precision and functionality using very small radiation pressure of light and dipole-induced gradient forces, so called optical tweezers. Stable trapping of absorbing particles in air was not achieved till now due to the dominance of forces from thermal interaction of the laser-irradiated particle with the molecules of ambient gas. We address this challenge by developing a touch-free optical trapping of particles suspended in air with optical vortices. The ability to guide absorbing particles along the vortex core in a stable and controlled manner can be employed further for high-accuracy manipulation of particles in three dimensions.
We also developed a femtosecond vortex beam converter where polarization singularities are created when the beam propagates through a birefringent crystal, to produce sub-micron ring structures on the surface of fused silica and glass samples. We employ this technique to generate optical vortex as well as radially (TM) and azimuthally (TE) polarized fs-laser pulses for sub-µm structuring of glass samples.
Interaction of tightly focused multiple fs-pulses with transparent media allows one to imprint their local polarization pattern with sub-wavelength resolution, including the presence of the longitudinal component of electric field. The materials’ response to the state of polarization of high intensity light fields has been used to map the complex vector structure in the focal volume of radially and azimuthally polarized fs-laser pulses.
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
Nuffield Bursary Award
Ewa Karczewska has been awarded a Nuffield Foundation Undergraduate Research Bursary to work in the UCL Optical Tweezers Group this summer. This scheme allows UK undergraduates to gain research experience by providing funding for up to eight weeks to complete a research project during the summer vacation. We have hosted three previous Nuffield Foundation Bursary students: Muddassar Rashid (2008) who worked on synthesis and properties of polarisation vortex beams, Alex Dunning (2009) who performed calculations on the properties of optical nanofibres and is now studying for a PhD at Southampton University, and Radhika Patel (2010) who worked on photonic force microscopy experiments and is taking her final exams this year.
Friday, 1 April 2011
Optical Trapping Applications
Next week Phil, Susan and Marios will all be attending the OSA Optical Trapping Applications conference in Monterey, CA. Phil will be giving a talk about our work on trapping with novel beams, and Susan and Marios will be presenting posters on their research projects.
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