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Ursula Keller
Ursula Keller 06 2019.jpg
Born 21 June 1959 (1959-06-21) (age 64)
Nationality Swiss
Known for Inventing the Semiconductor saturable-absorber mirror technology used in mode locking ultra-fast solid-state laser systems
Scientific career
Fields Physics, Laser Technology
Doctoral students Clara Saraceno

Ursula Keller (born 21 June 1959) is a Swiss physicist. She has been a physics professor at the ETH Zurich, Switzerland since 2003 with a speciality in ultra-fast laser technology, an inventor and the winner of the 2018 European Inventor Award by the European Patent Office.

Career

Ursula Keller grew up in a working-class family. After graduating as a physics engineer in 1984 from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, she continued her studies at Stanford University, where she obtained a master's degree in applied physics in 1987, and then continued with a doctorate in physics obtained in 1989. The topic of her studies was the development of a new technique for optical measurement of charge and voltage in GaAs type integrated circuits.

From 1989 to 1993, she worked at AT&T Bell's research centre in New Jersey, where she conducted research on photonic switching, ultra-fast laser technology and semiconductor spectroscopy and developed a method for manufacturing ultra-short pulse lasers.

In 1993, she was appointed Professor of Physics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, becoming the school's first female Professor of Physics. In October 1997, she became a full professor.

Her research areas are ultra-fast solid-state and semiconductor lasers, the development of reliable and functional instruments to generate extreme ultraviolet (EUV) X-rays and attosecond science. She developed the first method for generating ultra-fast light pulses known as semiconductor saturable-absorber mirrors (SESAMs), which have become a worldwide industry standard for cutting and welding in fields ranging from electronics and automotive industry to communications technology, medical diagnostics and surgery and has made myriad important contributions to the field of laser science since. Dr. Keller’s earlier research into carrier envelope phase stabilization and frequency comb technology was integral to Theodor W. Hänsch and John L. Hall’s development of laser-based spectroscopy that garnered them the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Ursula Keller has nearly 700 articles published with total citation of 45131 and h-index of 109. Her most popular publication has cited by 1905 people (as on 12th September 2020).

Ursula Keller is the founder and president of ETH Women Professors Forum

Ursula Keller has patented several inventions in the field of ultra-fast lasers for industrial and medical applications.

She is the creator of the Attoclock, one of the most accurate time measurement devices in the world, which can record time intervals up to a few attoseconds, the billionth part of a billionth of a second.

Since 2010, Ursula Keller has been Director of the Swiss National Research Centre for Ultra-fast Molecular Sciences and Technologies.

Since 2014, she has been a member of the Research Council of the Swiss National Science Foundation.

In 2018, Ursula Keller won the European Inventor Award in the "Lifetime Achievement ". In 2019, she was appointed as one of the leading experts that judges proposals for this award.

She won the IEEE Photonics Award in 2018 and the IEEE Edison Medal in 2019.

She won the 2020 Gold Medal from the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers and the 2020 Frederic Ives Medal / Jarus Quinn Prize from the Optical Society.

Awards and honors

  • Joseph Fraunhofer Award / Robert M. Burley Prize from The Optical Society, 2008 "For seminal contributions to the development and application of ultrafast lasers and notably pioneering work on semiconductor saturable absorber mode-locking."
  • Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2014 for contributions to ultrashort pulse mode locked laser physics and technology
  • Charles Hard Townes Award from The Optical Society "For seminal contributions in the fields of octave-spanning lasers, frequency comb technology, and high repetition-rate ultrafast semiconductor disc lasers."
  • Weizmann Women and Science Award in 2017
  • European Inventor Award 2018 for laser technology in the category “Lifetime achievement.”
  • IEEE Photonics Award, 2018
  • IEEE Edison Medal, 2019
  • SPIE Gold Medal, 2020
  • Frederick Ives Medal/Quinn Prize from The Optical Society in recognition of her work in ultra-fast laser technology
  • Elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2021

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Ursula Keller para niños

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