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= Andreas Muller =
= Andreas Muller =


'''''Andreas Muller''''' is a [[physicist]] at [[USF Tampa]] where he leads the [http://faculty.cas.usf.edu/mullera/Solid_State_Quantum_Optics_Lab_USF/Home.html solid state quantum optics lab]. An expert of the [[Mollow triplet]]{{cite|muller07a}}) (he did his PhD with [[Glen Solomon]]), he is the first and still the only one to have measured the [[two-photon spectrum]] of [[resonance fluorescence]].{{cite|peiris15a}} He later extended his experimental characterizations in a series of heroic works (sometimes requiring weeks of data acquisition).{{cite|peiris17a}}{{cite|nieves18a}}{{cite|nieves20a}} He currently investigates gas detectors and sensors from a quantum perspective.
'''''Andreas Muller''''' is a [[physicist]] at [[USF Tampa]] where he leads the [http://faculty.cas.usf.edu/mullera/Solid_State_Quantum_Optics_Lab_USF/Home.html solid state quantum optics lab]. An expert of the [[Mollow triplet]]{{cite|muller07a}} (he did his PhD with [[Glen Solomon]]), he is the first and still the only one to have measured the [[two-photon spectrum]] of [[resonance fluorescence]].{{cite|peiris15a}} He later extended his experimental characterizations in a series of heroic works (sometimes requiring weeks of data acquisition).{{cite|peiris17a}}{{cite|nieves18a}}{{cite|nieves20a}} He currently investigates gas detectors and sensors from a quantum perspective.


<center><wz tip="Andreas Muller presenting his pioneering observation of the full two-photon Mollow triplet at the 1st MULTIPHOTONICS workshop, 4 July 2024.">[[File:MULTIPHOTONICS-2024-17.jpg|600px]]</wz></center>
<center><wz tip="Andreas Muller presenting his pioneering observation of the full two-photon Mollow triplet at the 1st MULTIPHOTONICS workshop, 4 July 2024.">[[File:MULTIPHOTONICS-2024-17.jpg|600px]]</wz></center>

Latest revision as of 10:07, 4 February 2025

Andreas Muller

Andreas Muller is a physicist at USF Tampa where he leads the solid state quantum optics lab. An expert of the Mollow triplet[1] (he did his PhD with Glen Solomon), he is the first and still the only one to have measured the two-photon spectrum of resonance fluorescence.[2] He later extended his experimental characterizations in a series of heroic works (sometimes requiring weeks of data acquisition).[3][4][5] He currently investigates gas detectors and sensors from a quantum perspective.

We first met him on July (2024) in Garching bei München for the Multiphotonics (2024) workshop. He is fluent in French and German (Bavarian-born) and the sort of experimental genius whose exceptional skills are hidden in humility and wholesomeness.

I am sure that his work on two-photon spectra which has been largely ignored so far will eventually be recognized as a historical breakthrough, for being so ahead of time and with such stupendous quality. He is the first person to have observed the leapfrog processes and two-mode squeezing in resonance fluorescence, so early that it was even before all this was understood.

References