Past Event · Public Lecture

Making Waves in a Superconductor

Presented by Giacomo Coslovich

Superconductors are materials in which electric current flows freely, without resistance. They are used to create the powerful magnetic fields needed to operate MRI machines and levitate high-speed trains, and have even served as building blocks for quantum computers. While most metals can become superconducting at temperatures close to absolute zero, more complex materials can superconduct at higher temperatures. Can we discover what makes these materials so special?  This lecture will describe experiments at SLAC that use optical and X-ray lasers to create waves in high-temperature superconductors and observe how the materials “breathe” at the atomic level. We hope to find a path to materials that are superconducting at room temperature, making this exotic phenomenon available for everyday applications.

 

View the video recording of this lecture on our YouTube page. 

About Giacomo Coslovich

Headshot of Giacomo Coslovich

Giacomo Coslovich has spent his career studying complex materials using ultrafast lasers. He did his graduate research at the University of Trieste, Italy, receiving his PhD in 2011. He then took a postdoctoral position at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. In 2015, he became a staff scientist at SLAC, where he studies high-temperature superconductors using SLAC’s LCLS X-ray laser.

 

Registration is not required. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.

We will also be streaming the lecture live on our Facebook page a few minutes before the start time.

 

 

 

Past Event · Public Lecture

Making Waves in a Superconductor

Presented by Giacomo Coslovich

Public Lectures
Stillframe for public lecture
Video
Date
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. PST