
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Ferenc Krausz was preparing to give lab tours at his Institute when a call from Stockholm reached him at home. “I was not sure whether I was dreaming, or whether it’s reality,” he tells the Nobel Prize’s Adam Smith in this call recorded just after the physics prize was announced. “It’s always exciting to see something that no-one could see before,” he says, recalling the thrilling morning in Vienna in 2001 when he first saw that they were able to reveal electron motions with their attosecond pulse technology: “This was just an unbelievable moment which I will never forget!”
© Nobel Prize Outreach.
First reactions terms of use: https://www.nobelprize.org/ceremonies/streams-terms-of-use
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.9
4242 ratings
Ferenc Krausz was preparing to give lab tours at his Institute when a call from Stockholm reached him at home. “I was not sure whether I was dreaming, or whether it’s reality,” he tells the Nobel Prize’s Adam Smith in this call recorded just after the physics prize was announced. “It’s always exciting to see something that no-one could see before,” he says, recalling the thrilling morning in Vienna in 2001 when he first saw that they were able to reveal electron motions with their attosecond pulse technology: “This was just an unbelievable moment which I will never forget!”
© Nobel Prize Outreach.
First reactions terms of use: https://www.nobelprize.org/ceremonies/streams-terms-of-use
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5,457 Listeners
290 Listeners
32,138 Listeners
294 Listeners
780 Listeners
526 Listeners
43,735 Listeners
6,668 Listeners
302 Listeners
811 Listeners
2,095 Listeners
14,050 Listeners
496 Listeners
864 Listeners
2,271 Listeners