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Optica Announces New Vice President and Directors-at-Large

02 November 2021

Optica Announces New Vice President and Directors-at-Large

Founding director, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light will be 2022 vice president; Director of Macquarie University’s MQ Photonics Research Centre and Vice President for Research and Chair Professor of Photonics at Westlake University will be a directors-at-large.

WASHINGTON – The membership of Optica, formerly OSA, the leading organization for the advancement of optics and photonics worldwide, has elected Gerd Leuchs, director emeritus at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Germany, as the society’s 2022 Vice President.  Judith Dawes, Professor of Physics and director of MQ Photonics Research Centre at Macquarie University, Australia, was voted in as a director-at-large for a 2022-2024 term. The Optica Board of Directors appointed Min Qiu, vice president for research and chair professor of photonics at Westlake University, China, as a director-at-large from 2022-2024.

The election results were announced today during the Optica Annual Business Meeting, which was held during the Frontiers in Optics + Laser Science Conference, 01-04 November 2021.  This year’s conference and all special events were held in an all-virtual format and drew participants from around the globe.

“Gerd has been an active member of our organization throughout his professional life,” said Optica CEO Elizabeth Rogan. “His groundbreaking work in laser spectroscopy and quantum communication and his extensive knowledge of our organization will be great assets.”

Gerd Leuchs has been leading research groups since 1985, including a period from 1990-1994 when he worked in industry in Switzerland. He then moved on to the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg. Following a 5-year block grant by the Max-Planck Society, the new Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light was established in 2009. There Leuchs served as a director until 2019, when he received emeritus status and continued leading a smaller-scale research group. Gerd also works part time at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg and is currently affiliated with the Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences at Nizhny-Novgorod. In addition, he has close ties to the University of Ottawa as professor adjunct.

His scientific work includes quantum beats, photo-electron angular distributions in multi-photon ionization, quantum noise reduced and entangled light beams, and solitons in optical fibers, quantum communication protocols, focusing light beams and nanophotonics and interferometry.

An Optica Fellow since 2004, Leuchs has authored more than 400 publications in scientific journals and has edited three books. In 2005, the European Physical Society awarded him the Quantum Electronics and Optics Prize and in 2018, the German Physical Society and Optica presented him with the Herbert Walther Award.

Judith Dawes is a Professor of Physics and director of Macquarie University’s MQ Photonics Research Centre, Sydney, Australia and is a member of the Academic Senate of the University. After holding postdoctoral positions at the University of Toronto, Canada, and Macquarie University, she was appointed to a faculty position at Macquarie where she served as head of the Department of Physics and Astronomy from 2013-2015.

An Optica Fellow since 2019, Dawes’ current research focuses on the collective interactions of light at the nanoscale, applying nanophotonics to imaging and sensing. Her research achievements include the crystal growth, optical characterization, and laser operation of a new laser crystal, Yb:YAB, which emits tunable, self-frequency-doubled, infrared and green light; and the invention of a laser-cured protein solder for laser microsurgery to repair severed nerves and blood vessels.

Min Qiu has been a Chair Professor of Photonics and Vice President for Research at Westlake University, China, since April 2018. He received a PhD in Physics from Zhejiang University, China, in 1999. Qiu received his second PhD degree in Electromagnetics and became an assistant professor at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden, in 2001. He became a full professor (Professor of Photonics) at KTH in 2009 before moving to Zhejiang University in 2010, where he was the Director of State Key Laboratory of Modern Optical Instrumentation. 

Professor Qiu’s research interests include nanofabrication technology, nanophotonics, and green photonics. He is currently leading a project on solar thermal energy utilization through the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2017YFA0205700). He was named an Optica fellow in 2015.

About Optica

Optica, Advancing Optics and Photonics Worldwide, is the society dedicated to promoting the generation, application, archiving and dissemination of knowledge in the field. Founded in 1916, it is the leading organization for scientists, engineers, business professionals, students and others interested in the science of light. Optica's renowned publications, meetings, online resources and in-person activities fuel discoveries, shape real-life applications and accelerate scientific, technical and educational achievement. Discover more at: Optica.org

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