• RTG Colloquium:
    Franz Giessibl & Sabine Maier

    Venue: Run auditorium2 pmAtomic Force Microscopy (AFM)This tutorial presentation builds on Jascha Repp’s introduction to scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) six months ago. STM […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Jan Vogelsang & Gerti Beliu

    2 pmFrom single‐molecule fluorescence spectroscopy to (fast) super‐resolution microscopySuper‐resolution (SR) microscopy has revolutionized far‐field fluorescence imaging by overcoming the diffraction limit of light. […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Ulrich Höfer

    Formation of Floquet-Bloch bands in solidsPeriodic driving of electrons in solids by strong light fields can lead to the formation of Floquet- Bloch […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Prof. Dr. Miriam Vitiello

    Detector-less near-field quantum nanoscopy in the far-infraredNEST, CNR – Istituto Nanoscienze and Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy Near-field nanoscopy at terahertz (THz) frequencies […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Prof. Dr. Jim Freericks

    How to describe pump-probe experiments in quantum materialsGeorgetown University, Washington, USA I will describe both the challenges, and how to address them, when […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Prof. Dr. Rudolf Bratschitsch

    Title: Magnonic waveguide networks Ultrafast solid-state quantum optics and nanophotonics, Physical Institute, University of Münster, Münster, Germany Spin waves (magnons) have emerged as […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Dr. Anna Rosławska

    Single-molecule optics with atomic precision Atomic Scale Optics, Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research, Stuttgart, Germany Luminescence, photosynthesis, and energy harvesting rely […]

  • RTG Colloquium:
    Prof. Dr. Renske van der Veen

    Fast electrons and hard X-rays for unraveling atomic-scale dynamics in light-energy conversion Department Atomic-Scale Dynamics in Light-Energy Conversion, Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin The increasing […]