Report: iSAP Hamamatsu 2018
This symposium included an introductory talk, five invited lectures, and 20 poster presentations. Around a hundred researchers, engineers, and bureaucrats attended the symposium from universities, industries, and ministries. The lecturers showed remarkable activities in the attosecond science and related technologies.
The presentations covered the forefront of the attosecond science, such as high-harmonic and ultra-short pulse generation from solids, generation and utilization of sub-femtosecond x-rays, time-resolved x-ray absorption spectroscopy in the water window, real-world applications of attosecond metrology, and control of electrons inside of graphene on atomic time scales.
Fruitful discussions were made actively among the attendants even during the coffee breaks, making the symposium highly useful for the development of the attosecond science and technologies.
The presentations covered the forefront of the attosecond science, such as high-harmonic and ultra-short pulse generation from solids, generation and utilization of sub-femtosecond x-rays, time-resolved x-ray absorption spectroscopy in the water window, real-world applications of attosecond metrology, and control of electrons inside of graphene on atomic time scales.
Fruitful discussions were made actively among the attendants even during the coffee breaks, making the symposium highly useful for the development of the attosecond science and technologies.
Introductory talk
High-Order Harmonic Generation and Attosecond Science [PDF:445.5KB]
Katsumi Midorikawa (RIKEN, Japan)Invited lectures
Merging electronics with high-harmonic generation from solids [PDF:407KB]
Paul Corkum (University of Ottawa and National Research Council Canada, Canada)Attosecond X-rays Reached the Water Window [PDF:407KB]
Zenghu Chang (University of Central Florida, USA)Ultrafast science with sub-femtosecond X-rays [PDF:462.6KB]
Jon Marangos (Imperial College London, UK)Next-generation attosecond metrology [PDF:462.4KB]
Ferenc Krausz (Max-Planck-Institute of Quantum Optics, Germany)Attosecond control of electrons inside of graphene and in free-space beams [PDF:548.6KB]
Peter Hommelhoff (Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany)