Physicist
Receives Two Prestigious Awards to Support Research, Purchase
World-class Laser System
Carlos Trallero, assistant professor of
physics, has been honored with two prestigious national awards for his research
that will develop a deeper understanding of the basic laws of nature at the
quantum level.
Trallero recently received a nearly $1 million National Science Foundation Major
Research Instrumentation grant and nearly $200,000 from an Air Force Office of
Scientific Research Defense University Instrumentation Program grant.
The awards are two of the few instrumentation grants available for physicists in
the country and Trallero impressively received both in the same year. He will
use the grants to purchase a high-intensity tunable femtosecond laser.
"I'm very honored," said Trallero, who researches in the James R. Macdonald
Laboratory. "We hope to develop a world-class laser source right here at Kansas
State University."
Trallero will use the one-of-a-kind laser for doing research in molecular
physics, particularly in the fields of ultrafast physics and attosecond science.
He wants to better understand how molecules and atoms evolve in fast time
scales. The new laser system will also enable researchers to study a new type of
laser light only used by a handful of laboratories around the world.
"We are on the front end of research worldwide," Trallero said. "Purchasing this
new laser will have huge implications for us, because a lot of experiments we
want to do are limited by the kind of laser that we have. This will open a lot
of new doors for research."
The university has already provided $500,000 for infrastructure development and
renewal of existing Macdonald Laboratory space to prepare for the new laser
source. The university's commitment was essential to obtaining the external
funding, Trallero said.
Kansas State University collaborators on the project include Itzik Ben-Itzhak,
university distinguished professor and director of the Macdonald Laboratory;
Kevin Carnes, associate director for operations at the Macdonald Laboratory and
associate research professor; Matthias Kling, assistant professor; and Vinod
Kumarappan, assistant professor.
Collaborating schools include the University of Kansas, Louisiana State
University and Augustana College in South Dakota.
Courtesy of Communications and Marketing