Nonlinear optical spectroscopy with nonclassical light, photon counting detection and extreme wavelengths techniques
CFEL Theory Seminar
- Date: Nov 2, 2016
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Konstantin Dorfman
- SIMTech, Singapore
- Location: CFEL (Bldg. 99)
- Room: Seminar Room IV, O1.111
- Host: Angel Rubio

I will show how new quantum phenomena in complex systems can be studied
and controlled using advances in both quantum optics and nonlinear
spectroscopy. In particular I demonstrate how to probe and control the
dynamics of the complex excitonic systems using quantum light and reveal
the information, which is not accessible by conventional classical
photonics. I further show the power of the time-and-frequency resolved
photon counting techniques that complement existing multidimensional
optical techniques. I will finally utilize the newly developed X-ray
Stimulated Raman spectroscopies to control electron transfer processes
and collect information about molecular systems such as conical
intersections, core and valence dynamics with the attosecond precision.
Figure: A pair of entangled photons showing strong time-frequency correlations (left) is directed onto a molecular aggregate (center), and one transmitted beam is frequency-dispersed and detected. The resulting signal (right) can be controlled by the correlations.