강사소개
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Seong Ku Lee is currently a researcher of the Advanced Photonics Research Institute (APRI), Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST), Gwangju, Korea. He received his Bachelor’s degree in physics from POSTECH, Korea in 1998. He received his Master’s degree in physics from KAIST in 2000 and also his doctorate in physics from KAIST in 2005. He did post-doctoral work at ILE, Osaka University, Japan from 2005 to 2006. He was a Senior and Principal Research Scientist at the APRI from 2005 to 2020. He is currently a Head Research Scientist at the APRI. His research interests cover high power lasers such ultra-high intensity Ti:sapphire lasers, OPCPA, and ultrashort Mid-IR lasers. |
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Prof. Kyung Taec Kim has started his research carrier through his Master and Ph. D. degree courses at KAIST under the supervision of Prof. Chang Hee Nam. He has proposed an attosecond pulse compression using x-ray filters and developed techniques for the characterization of the electron wave packet produced by the attosecond pulses during his degree courses. After he obtained Ph. D, he participated in the project to build the PW laser facility in the Advanced Photonics Research Institute at Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST) in Korea. In 2010, he has joined Paul Corkum’s joint attosecond science laboratory at the National Research Council and the University of Ottawa in Canada. He developed optical techniques to measure the space-time coupling of attosecond pulses and arbitrary optical waveforms of light pulses. He also demonstrated the generation of multiple isolated attosecond pulses using the attosecond lighthouse method. Recently, he invented a pulse characterization method called tunneling ionization with a perturbation for the time-domain observation of an electric field (TIPTOE). Prof. Kyung Taec Kim is now an associate professor at the department of physics and photon science of GIST, and He is leading the attosecond science group as an associated director of the center of the relativistic laser science (CoReLS) of the institute for basic science at GIST in Korea. |
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Ki Yong Kim received the Ph.D. degree in physics from the University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA, in 2003. Then he worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory as a Director’s Postdoctoral Fellow. In 2008 he returned to the University of Maryland as an Assistant Professor and later became a Full Professor with the Department of Physics and the Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics (IREAP). In 2021, he joined Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST) as Professor in the Department of Physics and Photon Science and Associate Director at the Center for Relativistic Laser Science (CoReLS), Institute for Basic Science (IBS), Korea. He is the author or co-author of more than 200 research papers and conference proceedings. His current research interests include intense laser-matter interaction, ultrafast optical, terahertz, and X-ray spectroscopy, laser-driven charged particle acceleration and high-energy-density laboratory plasma physics. He is the recipient of the Marshall Rosenbluth Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Award presented by the American Physical Society (APS) in 2004, Postdoctoral Distinguished Performance Award by Los Alamos National Laboratory in 2007, and both National Science Foundation (NSF) and Department of Energy (DOE) Early Career Awards. |
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Dr. Changsu Jun is currently a researcher of the Advanced Photonics Research Institute (APRI), Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST), Gwangju, Korea. He received the B.S, M.S and Ph.D degree in Physics from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), S. Korea in 2002, 2007 and 2011, respectively. After the post-doctoral research about ultrafast fiber laser at Ajou University in 2011-2012, he joined the Wellman center for photomedicine of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard medical school as a research fellow for fiber laser-based bio-imaging through 2012-2015. He joined APRI in 2016 and is now a principal research scientist since 2020. His research interests are artificial intelligence-based smart lasers, high performance fiber lasers and fiber-based photonics for basic science and interesting applications. |
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Wook-Jae Lee is currently an Assistant Professor in Department of Data Information and physics, Kongju National University, Gongju, South Korea. He received his Bachelor’s degree in physics from the Catholic University of Korea in 2004 and also his Ph.D degree (Integrated Master’s and Doctorate Cource) in physics from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology in 2009. He did post-doctoral work at University of California Los Angeles, USA, from 2014 to 2016. He was a Senior Researcher at the Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute from 2017 to 2020. His research interests include integrated quantum photonics components. |
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She was born in 1971 at Gijang, S. Korea. She received her Bachelor’s degree in physics from the Dongeui University, S. Korea in 1994 and also her Master’s degree in physics, in 1998. She earned her doctorate in physics from the Pusan National University in 2002, and did post-doctoral work at the National Institute of Materials Science(NIMS)Tsukuba, Japan, from 2002 to 2005. She was a Senior Research Scientist at the APRI from 2005 to 2011 and a Principal Researcher from 2011 to now. Also she was a Head Research Scientist at the spectroscopy sensor laboratory of APRI. She is also adjunct professor the Edith Cowan University at Australia in the School of Science. She research interests cover the nonlinear frequency conversions based on the second order nonlinearty with quasi-phase matching technology and application of laser light for display such as a head-up display (HUD) and light detection and ranging (LIDAR) for automotive. |
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Kyoung-Duck Park is currently an assistant professor of the Department of Physics, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), Pohang, Korea. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Information and Communication Engineering from Inha University, Korea in 2008 and also his Master’s degree in Information and Communication Engineering, in 2010. He received his doctorate in Chemical Physics from University of Colorado at Boulder in 2017, and continued post-doctoral work at the same institute in 2018. He was an assistant professor at UNIST from 2018 to 2022. He is currently an assistant professor at POSTECH. His research interests cover atomic, molecular, optical physics (optical instrumentation, nano-optics, single-molecule spectroscopy), condensed matter physics (characterizations of quantum materials, strong light-matter interactions), quantum information science (sensing, metrology, single-photon source). |