The activities of the Department reflect a spectrum of interests ranging from pure science to engineering and include several interdisciplinary programs. Student research is supervised by faculty in the Department of Applied Physics, by affiliated faculty, and by members of other departments.
Accelerator physics research explores the physics and technologies of particle accelerators and beams. The objectives include understanding and improving accelerator performance, developing new technologies, and exploring novel accelerators driven by lasers and based on plasmas. This research encompasses non-linear dynamics, computer simulation and modeling, high speed data acquisition and processing, photonics, plasma physics and other areas of applied physics. The context for the research often comes from other branches of science where accelerators have a central role. These range from particle physics to studies of atoms, molecules, and condensed matter using x-rays and neutrons. Accelerator physics research is carried out at the Ginzton Laboratory and at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC).
The roots of modern day astronomy-astrophysics activities at Stanford were established in the newly formed Department of Applied Physics circa 1969. But over the years, programmatic consideration led to a shift of the activity in this area to the Department of Physics. All subsequent growth has taken place in the Physics Department, and starting around 2003, there has been a very rapid expansion with appointments of several new faculty jointly between the Physics Department and SLAC as a result of the establishment of the Kavli Institute of Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC). Currently, one member of the Applied Physics faculty research interests are fully in the area of astrophysics and cosmology, and another faculty member has a peripheral interest in this area. Students interested in studies in astrophysics should consult the web pages of the Astronomy Program, KIPAC, and the Physics Department.
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Atomic and Molecular Physics research at Stanford spans ultrafast science, quantum information science, degenerate quantum gases, and precision measurement. For research descriptions, see links to individual group web pages for participating faculty.
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Biophysics research in the Department of Applied Physics involves a range of topics that includes single molecule studies of individual proteins and nucleic acids, biomolecular structural studies conducted at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, simulations of biomolecular dynamics, in vivo optical imaging studies of the mammalian brain, computational and theoretical studies of neuronal networks, and development of new techniques for microgenomics, among others. A variety of techniques are emphasized, such as optical tweezers, single molecule fluorescence, small angle X-ray scattering, two-photon fluorescence excitation, and methods for linear amplification of nucleic acid sequences. Further, Applied Physics students pursuing biophysics research have available many opportunities afforded by the forty-one laboratories affiliated with the Stanford Biophysics Program and the Stanford Bio-X Program.
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Condensed matter and materials physics involves the making, physical study and theoretical understanding of materials for the advance of science and applications as appropriate. The CMMP community at Stanford is large. The center of gravity of this activity is in Applied Physics and is housed in the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials, which is an independent laboratory under the Dean of Research with faculty from Applied Physics, Physics and Materials Science and Engineering. The full range of opportunities includes activities in the Ginzton Laboratory, the Center for Integrated Systems, the Clark Center, SLAC, and the Departments of Biology, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, and Physics.
Currently, the CMMP research in Applied Physics includes the discovery of new materials with novel physical properties, the growth of materials as models systems, the physical study of materials with a wide range of approaches (including scanning probes and synchrotron radiation as well as more traditional approaches) and the quantum theory and statistical mechanics of materials. Active research areas presently include highly-correlated electronic systems, superconductivity and its applications, magnetism and spintronics, and nanostructures and mesoscopic quantum physics.
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Many traditional disciplines of science and engineering are making dramatic strides by studying and capitalizing on the properties of materials at length scales ranging from 1 to 1000 nanometers. Nanoscale Science and Engineering is characterized not only by its great technological potential but also by its fascinating scientific challenges. If we try to extend our understanding down from the macroscopic, we find that nanoscale systems do not behave like larger systems. They are too small to be characterized by the rules developed in various disciplines to describe macroscopic systems: disorder and statistics become more important, and quantum mechanics and fluctuations often play a large role. If we try to extend our understanding up from the atomic, we also find that nanoscale systems do not behave like smaller systems. The two-body problem can be solved by students in freshman mechanics, and the three-body problem is somewhat harder: the 1,000,000-body system challenges even our impressive modern computational capabilities and theoretical understanding.
Nanoscale Science and Engineering is not an intellectual discipline in the traditional sense. It is a set of tools and cross-disciplinary questions. The nanoscale is a natural intellectual frontier in a number of disciplines, including biology, materials science and engineering, medicine, chemical engineering, and device physics, as well as the present areas of strength of the Stanford Applied Physics Department, namely condensed matter physics, biology, and photonics. Many if not most Applied Physicists do at least some nanoscale research. Stanford is also fortunate to have excellent facilities in nano, including SSRL, SNF, and SNL. Stanford’s Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, called the Center for Probing the Nanoscale, includes many Applied Physics faculty and is housed in the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials.
The field of mesoscopic physics in closely related to nanoscale science. “Mesoscopic” literally means something that is on the border between the macroscopic world of ordinary human perception and the microscopic, or atomic, scale. Mesoscopic objects, like macroscopic objects, are large enough that they are made of many atoms; but, like microscopic objects, they are small enough that fluctuations and quantum mechanics are important. Contemporary mesoscopic physics is the study of electronic, magnetic, photonic, and mechanical objects that are sufficiently small that quantum mechanics is important for their description.
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Under construction.
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Quantum information science is a rapidly growing field with broad spectra covering from the foundation of quantum mechanics to the implementation of various quantum algorithms. The Department of Applied Physics is the home department for research on quantum information science at Stanford. The quantum information systems under intensive current research include quantum cryptography, quantum metrology, quantum repeater, quantum simulation, quantum computation and quantum authentication. Both theoretical and experimental studies have been actively performed in the respective sub-areas.
Professor Martin Fejer’s group is working on PPLN waveguide devices for single photon frequency conversion and parametric entangled photon generation. Professor Steve Harris’ group is working on the twin photon generation from atomic ensemble in the EIT regime. Professor Mark Kasevich’s group is working on precision measurements and quantum metrology with cold neutral atoms and optical lattice. Professor Jelena Vuckovic of Electrical Engineering is working with many Applied Physics students in the area of photonic crystal network devices for photonic quantum information systems. Professor Yoshihisa Yamamoto’s group is working on the experimental implementation of various quantum communication systems based on solid state devices. His effort includes quantum key distribution system experiments, deterministic single photon sources based on semiconductor quantum dots, quantum repeaters based on cavity QED nodes and coherent state bus, quantum computation based on electron spins and ultrafast optical pulses and quantum simulation of Hubbard models using surface acoustic waves.
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Research utilizing extremely intense vacuum ultraviolet, soft x-ray and x-ray radiation is carried out at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL), and in the near future the Linac Coherence Light Source (LCLS), the x-ray free electron laser. At SSRL, 24 experimental stations provide beams whose spectra are continuous and whose intensities are approximately seven orders of magnitude greater than those of more classical sources. The principal areas of experimental research are vacuum ultraviolet and soft x-ray studies of atoms, molecules, and solids, x-ray studies of condensed matter, and structural molecular biology studies utilizing x-rays. At LCLS, six experimental stations, when completed, will be the world’s first x-ray free electron laser when it becomes operational in 2009. Pulses of x-ray laser light from LCLS will be many orders of magnitude brighter and several orders of magnitude shorter than what can be produced by any other x-ray source available now or in the near future. These characteristics will enable frontier new science areas in atomic and molecular physics and condensed matter sciences ranging from materials to biology.
Applied Physics students who wish to carry out research utilizing SSRL may do so in collaboration with either Applied Physics faculty or faculty from the Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Geology, or Materials Science and Engineering Departments.
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Research in ultrafast science in Applied Physics takes place in the Ginzton Laboratory, and at the Stanford Photon Ultrafast Laser Science and Engineering Center (PULSE): PULSE is a new independent laboratory at Stanford and also a Research Center at SLAC. It is the home for a wide range of research projects on rapid processes (picosecond scale or faster), in physics, chemistry, biology, and materials science and engineering.
Ultrafast: Femtoscience: Atoms in a molecule or a solid move very quickly. The primary atomic motions involved in vision, or photosynthesis, or melting, all take less than a picosecond. Ultrafast lasers can more than keep up with this, so lasers can act like strobe lights with ultrafast shutter speeds to freeze atomic motion. Much physics and chemistry research is devoted to these kinds of ultrafast observations, in the femtosecond range.
Shorter still: Attoscience: The shortest laser pulses are now less that one thousandth of a picosecond, in the sub-femtosecond range. At these extreme shutter speeds, the laser pulses can begin to capture the motion of electrons within atoms. Such pulses must have sub-optical wavelengths, since the pulse duration is less than a single cycle of visible radiation. This attosecond vacuum ultraviolet coherent radiation has recently been produced through atomic nonlinear processes, and it may soon give us our first images of electrons moving in molecules.
Ultrafast x-rays: The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center will be home to the world’s first x-ray free-electron laser, LCLS, due to begin operations in 2009. This will produce sub-picosecond x-rays that are one billion times brighter than the brightest current sources. As with the most powerful lasers, these x-rays will be focusable to field strengths that exceed the fields that bind electrons in atoms. A wealth of new science is expected from research at LCLS, in atomic physics, condense matter and materials science, ultrafast chemistry, and high energy density science.
Ultrafast control: Ultrafast laser pulses can do more than just detect atomic motion. They can also be used to control basic quantum processes in atoms and molecules. Ultrafast quantum control research uses pulse shaping techniques to create new optical waveforms that can enhance light-induced processes, or even direct photochemical reactions along new paths. The optimal field may not be obvious, but programmable pulse shapers can use clues from the photochemical process itself to evolve new optical field shapes. In this way, the molecule teaches the laser how to perform an atomic-level task.
Faculty: The faculty members in this field can be viewed at the link below. In addition, there are opportunities for ultrafast research in several groups at SLAC and in Chemistry and Materials Science. Further information can be found on the PULSE website.
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There are many interdepartmental or interschool laboratories offering unique opportunities and facilities for research. These include the Edward L. Ginzton Laboratory, the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, the Center for Space Science and Astrophysics, the Center for Integrated Systems, the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, and the W.W. Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory. Refer to related departments and research centers in our links page for information on faculty outside of the Applied Physics Department pursuing research in the areas listed.