Nuh Gedik
Physics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Poland
Biography
Professor Gedik joined MIT Physics Department as an assistant professor in January 2008. He received his B.S. in Physics in 1998 from Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey and his Ph.D in Physics in 2004 from University of California, Berkeley. After his Ph.D, he moved to Caltech where worked as a postdoctoral scholar till January 2008.
Research Interest
Professor Gedik's research centers on developing and using advanced optical techniques for investigating ultrafast processes in solids, nanostructures and interfacial molecular assemblies. Typical timescale for these events are femtoseconds (billionth of a millionth of a second), and typical length scales are angstroms (tenth of a billionth of a meter). In order to resolve these fast processes, ultrafast laser pulses with femtosecond durations are used. To achieve spatial sensitivity in the angstrom scale, Gedik group generates ultrashort electron packets from ultrafast laser pulses via photoelectric effect. After being accelerated to high energies, diffraction of these electron packets is used to record atomic scale "movies" with femtosecond time resolution and angstrom scale spatial resolution.