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  1. Serge Haroche (Casablanca, 11 de setembro de 1944) é um físico francês. É desde 2001 professor do Collège de France. Em 2012 foi laureado, juntamente com David Wineland , com o Prêmio Nobel da Física , "por métodos experimentais inovadores que permitem a medição e a manipulação de sistemas quânticos individuais".

  2. Serge Haroche (born 11 September 1944) is a French physicist who was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize for Physics jointly with David J. Wineland for "ground-breaking experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems", a study of the particle of light, the photon.

  3. Serge Haroche was born in 1944 in Casablanca. He graduated from Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS), receiving his doctorate from Paris VI University in 1971. After a post-doctoral visit to Stanford University, he became full professor at Paris VI University in 1975, a position he held until 2001, when he was appointed Professor at Collège de ...

  4. 6 de mai. de 2024 · Serge Haroche (born September 11, 1944, Casablanca, Morocco) is a French physicist who was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize for Physics for devising methods to study the quantum mechanical behaviour of individual photons. He shared the prize with American physicist David Wineland.

  5. Serge Haroche The Nobel Prize in Physics 2012 . Born: 11 September 1944, Casablanca, Morocco . Affiliation at the time of the award: Collège de France, Paris, France; École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France . Prize motivation: “for ground-breaking experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems”

  6. 4 de out. de 2022 · Serge Haroche, who shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics for quantum physics, praises the 2022 laureates for their experiments with entangled photons. He says the prize is long overdue and the research has laid the foundations for quantum information science.

  7. Serge Haroche est un physicien français, lauréat du prix Nobel de physique 2012, spécialiste de la physique atomique et de l’optique quantique. Il est professeur du Collège de France et directeur du groupe d’électrodynamique des systèmes simples au laboratoire Kastler Brossel.