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Naomi Ginsberg
Born 1979 (age 45–46)
Education University of Toronto (BSc)
Harvard University (PhD)
Awards
  • Sloan Research Fellow
  • DARPA Young Faculty Award
Scientific career
Fields Chemistry
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Thesis Manipulations with spatially compressed slow light pulses in Bose-Einstein condensates (2007)
Doctoral advisor Lene Hau

Naomi Shauna Ginsberg, born in 1979, is a talented scientist from Canada. She is an electrical engineer and a physicist. Currently, she works as a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley.

Early Life and Education

Naomi Ginsberg was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. She studied engineering at the University of Toronto, earning her degree in 2000. After that, she went to Harvard University to get her PhD in physics.

At first, Naomi was interested in studying medicine. But she ended up focusing on electrical engineering, especially physics and optics. While at Harvard, she joined a research group led by physics professor Lene Hau. There, Naomi studied something called Bose–Einstein condensates. These are super cold clouds of atoms, almost at absolute zero temperature.

Naomi earned her PhD in 2007. Her special project was about controlling light pulses in these cold atom clouds. After her PhD, she decided to explore new areas. She moved to Berkeley in 2007 to start her postdoctoral research. Later, in 2010, she became a professor in the chemistry department at UC Berkeley.

Amazing Scientific Work

Naomi Ginsberg has done some really cool experiments. While she was part of the Hau Group at Harvard, her team achieved something amazing. They managed to stop a light signal and store it in a cloud of sodium atoms. Then, they moved that signal to another cloud of atoms nearby.

The American Institute of Physics called this achievement one of the top ten discoveries of 2007! Naomi was the main author of the science paper that described this breakthrough. It was even featured on the cover of Nature magazine.

Today, Naomi leads her own research team, called the Ginsberg Group. They study how tiny processes work, like how plants capture light for energy. Her group uses special tools like ultrafast spectroscopy and different types of microscopes. They want to answer big questions in chemistry, physics, and biology.

Awards and Recognition

Naomi Ginsberg has received many important awards for her work.

  • In 2011, she won the David and Lucile Packard Foundation Fellowship for Science and Engineering.
  • In 2012, she received a Young Faculty Award from DARPA. This award helped support her research on new materials.
  • In 2015, she was given a Sloan Research Fellowship.
  • In 2021, Naomi was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS). This honor recognized her for developing new ways to image and study materials at a very small scale. Her work helps us understand how energy moves in different materials.

Naomi Ginsberg continues to be a leading scientist. She holds a special chair in the college of chemistry and works at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Naomi Ginsberg para niños

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