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  1. Anne L'Huillier (Paris, 1958) é uma física francesa e professora de física atômica na Universidade de Lund, na Suécia. Ela lidera um grupo de física de attossegundos que estuda os movimentos dos elétrons em tempo real, que é usado para entender as reações químicas no nível atômico. [1]

  2. Anne Geneviève L'Huillier ([an lɥi.je]; born 16 August 1958) is a French physicist, and professor of atomic physics at Lund University in Sweden. She leads an attosecond physics group which studies the movements of electrons in real time, which is used to understand the chemical reactions on the atomic level. [3]

  3. Anne L’Huillier is a French/Swedish physicist working on the interaction between short and intense laser fields with atoms. Born in Paris in 1958 she defended her thesis on multiple multiphoton ionization in 1986, at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris and Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique (CEA).

  4. Anne L’Huillier. The Nobel Prize in Physics 2023. Born: 16 August 1958, Paris, France. Affiliation at the time of the award: Lund University, Lund, Sweden. Prize motivation: “for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter”. Prize share: 1/3.

  5. Anne LHuillier delivered her Nobel Prize lecture "The route to attosecond pulses: Attosecond Pulse Train" on 8 December 2023 at the Aula Magna, Stockholm University.

  6. Interview with the 2023 Nobel Prize laureate in physics Anne LHuillier on 6 December 2023 during the Nobel Week in Stockholm, Sweden. What inspired your passion for science?

  7. 4 de out. de 2023 · Twelve years ago, Professor Anne L’Huillier won the LOréal-UNESCO For Women in Science International Award for developing the world’s fastest camera to record events in attoseconds (a billionth of a billionth of a second).