From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pavlos Savvidis is an Armenian-born Greek physicist. He is a full professor at the Westlake University.

Education

Savvidis was born on 18 July 1976. He was educated at the University of Athens where he was awarded a bachelor's degree in physics in 1998. He moved to the University of Southampton where he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 2001. During his postgraduate study, he was supervised by Jeremy Baumberg where his doctoral research investigated polariton amplification, lasing and condensation in semiconductor microcavities.

Career

Following his PhD, Savvidis was a DARPA fellow at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) from 2001 to 2003. He returned to Greece at the University of Crete, elected to an assistant professor position at the age of 27. He was promoted to associate professor position in 2014 and Full Professor position in 2018. [1]

In 2014 he received the Leverhulme Trust visiting professor fellowship to spend one-year sabbatical leave at the Cavendish Laboratories of the University of Cambridge. [2] In 2017 he received the biannual FORTH research institutes 2017 award.

From 2004 onward, he held the position of Assistant Professor within the Department of Materials Science and Technology at the University of Crete, retiring in 2023 as full professor.

In 2019, he was appointed as an associate professor at Westlake University and been promoted in 2023 to full professor. [3]

Research

His research activities are mainly focused on light-matter interactions with special emphasis on low dimensional semiconductor nanostructures including the design and realization of optoelectronic devices based on fundamentally novel principles. [4] [5]

References

  1. ^ "Nanoscale Optoelectronics Lab - Group of Prof. Pavlos Savvidis". University of Crete.
  2. ^ "Visiting Professorships 2013". The Leverhulme Trust.
  3. ^ "Dr. Pavlos SAVVIDIS". Westlake University.
  4. ^ Dumé, Isabelle (18 May 2008). "'Polaritonics' forges ahead". Physics World.
  5. ^ "Quasiparticles are used to make a light-emitting diode". American Chemical Society.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pavlos Savvidis is an Armenian-born Greek physicist. He is a full professor at the Westlake University.

Education

Savvidis was born on 18 July 1976. He was educated at the University of Athens where he was awarded a bachelor's degree in physics in 1998. He moved to the University of Southampton where he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 2001. During his postgraduate study, he was supervised by Jeremy Baumberg where his doctoral research investigated polariton amplification, lasing and condensation in semiconductor microcavities.

Career

Following his PhD, Savvidis was a DARPA fellow at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) from 2001 to 2003. He returned to Greece at the University of Crete, elected to an assistant professor position at the age of 27. He was promoted to associate professor position in 2014 and Full Professor position in 2018. [1]

In 2014 he received the Leverhulme Trust visiting professor fellowship to spend one-year sabbatical leave at the Cavendish Laboratories of the University of Cambridge. [2] In 2017 he received the biannual FORTH research institutes 2017 award.

From 2004 onward, he held the position of Assistant Professor within the Department of Materials Science and Technology at the University of Crete, retiring in 2023 as full professor.

In 2019, he was appointed as an associate professor at Westlake University and been promoted in 2023 to full professor. [3]

Research

His research activities are mainly focused on light-matter interactions with special emphasis on low dimensional semiconductor nanostructures including the design and realization of optoelectronic devices based on fundamentally novel principles. [4] [5]

References

  1. ^ "Nanoscale Optoelectronics Lab - Group of Prof. Pavlos Savvidis". University of Crete.
  2. ^ "Visiting Professorships 2013". The Leverhulme Trust.
  3. ^ "Dr. Pavlos SAVVIDIS". Westlake University.
  4. ^ Dumé, Isabelle (18 May 2008). "'Polaritonics' forges ahead". Physics World.
  5. ^ "Quasiparticles are used to make a light-emitting diode". American Chemical Society.

External links


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