Nathalie Picqué

Nathalie Picqué is a French physicist working at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics [1] in the field Frequency Combs, where she studies ultra-high resolution spectroscopy using ultrashort pulses of light combined with Fourier-transform spectroscopy[2] to reveal the fine chemistry of samples, in particular in the mid-infrared,[3] demonstrating resolving power in excess of 1,000,000,000,000.

Nathalie Picqué
BornDecember 2, 1973 (1973-12-02) (age 49)
Alma materParis-Saclay University
Paris-Sorbonne University
Ecole Polytechnique
Known forFrequency Combs
Scientific career
InstitutionsMax Planck Institute of Quantum Optics
French National Centre for Scientific Research
Websitehttp://www.frequency-comb.eu

Education and career

Nathalie Picqué received[4] a master's degree in laser physics from Paris-Sorbonne University (formerly known as Pierre and Marie Curie University) and Ecole Polytechnique, in Paris, France and completed a doctoral degree in physics from Paris-Saclay University (formerly known as Université Paris-Sud), in Orsay, France in 1998. In 2000 she was awarded the Marie Curie postdoctoral fellowship to work at the European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy in Florence, Italy. In 2001, she became a staff scientist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Orsay, France.

She joined Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in 2008 as a part-time visiting scientist, before relocating her laboratory in Garching while becoming the leader of the research group.[5] She is now a scientist in the Emeritus Group Laser Spectroscopy[6] at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in, Germany, where she works together with Nobel prize laureate Theodor W. Hänsch on dual-combs spectroscopy.[7]

Awards and honors

  • 1999 Marie-Curie postdoctoral fellowship
  • 2007 Bronze Medal of the CNRS [8]
  • 2008 Jean-Jerphagnon Prize (French Physical Society, French Optical Society, French Academy of Technologies) [9]
  • 2010 Beller Lectureship Award [10]
  • 2013 Coblentz Award [11]
  • 2019 Fellow of Optica (formerly OSA)[4]
  • 2021 Gentner-Kastler Prize (German Physical Society, French Physical Society)[12]
  • 2021 Advanced Grant (European Research Council) [13]
  • 2022 Helmholtz Prize (PTB) [14]
  • 2022 Falling Walls Science Breakthrough in Physical Sciences [15]

References

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