Olga Kocharovskaya

Olga Anatolevna Kocharovskaya (Russian: Ольга Анатольевна Кочаровская) is a distinguished professor of physics at Texas A&M University,[1] known for her contributions to quantum optics[2][3] and gamma ray modulation.[4]

Kocharovskaya earned a doctorate in 1986 from N. I. Lobachevsky State University of Nizhny Novgorod.[1] Her research at that time was the first to study electromagnetically induced transparency.[5] She completed a habilitation in 1996.[1][6] After working in the Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences since 1986, she moved to Texas A&M in 1998, and became a distinguished professor there in 2007.[1]

She has been a fellow of the Optical Society of America since 1997,[1] and of the American Physical Society since 2005.[1][2] In 1998 she was one of three inaugural winners of the Willis E. Lamb Award for Laser Science and Quantum Optics, sponsored by the annual Physics of Quantum Electronics conference.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved 2017-10-06
  2. 1 2 APS Fellows Nominated by the Division of Atomic, Molecular & Optical Physics for 2005, American Physical Society, retrieved 2017-10-06
  3. 1 2 The Willis E. Lamb Award for Laser Science and Quantum Optics, retrieved 2017-10-06
  4. "Gamma-ray shaping could lead to 'nuclear' quantum computers", PhysicsWorld, Institute of Physics, March 20, 2014
  5. "Texas A&M University Physicists Have Devised A Way To Stop Light", Science, Texas A&M University, January 26, 2001, retrieved 2017-10-06
  6. Лазеры без инверсии населенностей [Lasers without population inversion; record of Kocharovskaya's habilitation thesis] (in Russian), Russian State Library, retrieved 2017-10-06
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