Gerhard Ertl Lecture & Award

Gerhard Ertl Lecture & Award

The Ertl Lecture Award was established in 2008 by the three Berlin universities (Humboldt University, Technical University and Free University) and the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and is awarded once a year. It commemorates former FHI Director Gerhard Ertl's Nobel Prize in Chemistry, which he received in 2007. The prize honours outstanding personalities and researchers in the field of catalysis where Ertl carried out exceptional research for many decades. The prize, sponsored by BASF, includes a one-week research stay at the participating Berlin institutions and a keynote lecture. The winner is typically announced in Spring, the lecture takes place around the December 10th, the anniversary of Ertl's Nobel Prize reception.

Speaker: Prof. Hrvoje Petek

The discovery and applications of topological quasiparticles by ultrafast microscopy

  • PC Department Online Seminar
  • Date: Oct 19, 2021
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Prof. Hrvoje Petek
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Host: Martin Wolf
Surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) are composite electromagnetic field-charge density wave collective modes that propagate at metal/dielectric interfaces at the local speed of light. The circulation of their fields from transverse to longitudinal causes a transverse spin angular momentum (SAM) locking known as quantum spin-Hall effect, which embodies the property of evanescent waves, such as SPPs, that changing the sign of the photon momentum direction changes the sign of its spin. In other words, the oppositely propagating SPP waves possess the opposite spin. SPP fields can also carry optical angular momentum (OAM), which can focus them into plasmonic vortices. [more]
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