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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 who received the Nobel Prize in Physics 2023 for her work on attosecond light sources and their applications. She is a professor of atomic physics at Lund University and a principal investigator at NanoLund, where she leads a research group on high-order harmonic generation and ultrafast electron dynamics.

  4. 12 de jan. de 2024 · 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.

    • 36 min
    • 16,4K
    • Nobel Prize
  5. Anne L’Huillier is a French physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics 2023 for her contributions to attosecond pulses of light. She discovered the phenomenon of overtones of light in 1987 and laid the ground for subsequent breakthroughs in producing attosecond pulses.

  6. Read the transcript of an interview with Anne L’Huillier, who won the 2023 Nobel Prize in physics for her contributions to atomic physics. She shares her passion for science, her teaching experience, her student support and her advice for young researchers.

  7. Anne L’Huillier is a French physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics for her work on the overtones of light. Read her interview on her passion, inspiration, advice and reactions to the award.