Gérard Mourou

Gérard Albert Mourou (French: [ʒeʁaʁ muʁu]; born 22 June 1944) is a French scientist and pioneer in the field of electrical engineering and lasers. He was awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2018, along with Donna Strickland, for the invention of chirped pulse amplification, a technique later used to create ultrashort-pulse, very high-intensity (petawatt) laser pulses.

Gérard Mourou
Mourou in 2014
Born
Gérard Albert Mourou

(1944-06-22) 22 June 1944
EducationUniversity of Grenoble (BSc, MSc)
Pierre and Marie Curie University (PhD)
Known forChirped pulse amplification
Awards
  • R. W. Wood Prize (1995)
  • Nobel Prize in Physics (2018)
Scientific career
InstitutionsÉcole polytechnique
ENSTA ParisTech
University of Rochester
University of Michigan
N. I. Lobachevsky State University of Nizhny Novgorod
Doctoral studentsDonna Strickland

In 1994, Mourou and his team at the University of Michigan discovered that the balance between the self-focusing refraction (see Kerr effect) and self-attenuating diffraction by ionization and rarefaction of a laser beam of terawatt intensities in the atmosphere creates "filaments" that act as waveguides for the beam, thus preventing divergence.

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