教授简介
Wu Haibin is professor and doctoral supervisor of the State Key Laboratory of Precision Spectral Science and Technology, East China Normal University. He received his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Arkansas in 2009. From 2010 to 2012, he worked as a research assistant in the Department of Physics, Duke University. Since September 2012, he has been working in the State Key Laboratory of Precision Spectral Science and Technology, East China Normal University. He is mainly engaged in experimental research of quantum optics and ultra-cold Fermi atomic gas and relies on the laboratory to establish the research direction of “ultra-cold atomic precision spectroscopy”, He built an experimental platform for the precision control of ultra-cold Fermi atomic and molecular quantum gases. He has published more than 40 academic research papers in Science and other physical journals. In the past five years, he has published 20 corresponding author papers, including one in Science, one in Science Advances, two in Phys. Rev. Letts. The papers he published were quoted by the peer papers in the journals of physics like the Nature, Science, and Rev. Mod. Phys., Nature sub-journal and Phys. Rev. Lett. The SCI cited nearly 1,000 times, among which two papers were cited more than 100 times. He has presided over one key project, one major plan project and one general project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China, one quantum control special project of the Key R&D Plan of the Ministry of Science and Technology and one major basic research project of Shanghai Municipality and participated in the Innovation Group of the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the major science and technology special project of Shanghai Municipality. He was funded by national and Shanghai municipal talent programs. APS and OSA Physics Journal Reviewer; member of the Special Editorial Board of the Journal of Cryogenic Physics.
教育背景
Educational Background
研究领域
Research Interests
学术成果
学术成果
课程
Teaching Interests
相关报道
In the Media