John Kitching describes recent progress in the development of millimeter-scale instruments based on alkali atom vapor cells implemented with microfabrication techniques. Because of their small size and correspondingly low power requirements, these "chip-scale" atomic clocks and magnetometers have the potential to bring atomically precise instrumentation to portable, battery-operated systems such as GPS receivers, remote sensors and wireless communication devices. In addition, wafer-level processing and assembly potentially allows for very low cost per instrument if high volumes are produced.
Slusher has a 40-year career that spans semiconductors and liquid helium, laser diagnostics, squeezed state generation, microdisk lasers and optical pulse propagation in nonlinear media. His research has provided the foundation for understanding the optical phenomena that underlie optical networking products.
Ginzton Laboratory - AP 207 - Stanford University - Stanford, CA 94305-4088
P: 650-723-5627
F: 650-725-1822
Email: photonics@stanford.edu
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