Editorial Board
Benjamin J. Eggleton - Editor-in-Chief
Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research)
Institute of Photonics and Optical Science (IPOS)
School of Physics, University of Sydney
Sydney, Australia
https://sydney.edu.au/science/about/our-people/academic-staff/benjamin-eggleton.html
Professor Benjamin Eggleton is the Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research) at the University of Sydney. He also currently serves as co-Director of the NSW Smart Sensing Network (NSSN). He was Director of the University of Sydney Nano Institute (Sydney Nano) from 2018-2022. He was the founding Director of the Institute of Photonics and Optical Science (IPOS) at the University of Sydney (from 2009-2018) and was founding Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Ultrahigh bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems (CUDOS) (from 2003-2017). He was previously an ARC Laureate Fellow and an ARC Federation Fellow twice. Eggleton obtained his Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of Sydney in 1996. He then joined Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies as a Postdoctoral Member of Staff in the Optical Physics Department and was promoted to Technical Manager of the Fiber Gratings Group in 2000. He was then promoted to Research Director within the Specialty Fiber Business Division of Bell Laboratories, where he was engaged in forward-looking research supporting Lucent Technologies (then OFS) business in optical fiber devices.
Research Interests: An international leader in nanophotonics and nonlinear optical physics, Benjamin’s pioneering contributions to nanophotonics include breakthroughs in the nonlinear optics of periodic media, ultrafast planar waveguide nonlinear optics, photonic crystal fibers, optofluidics, and fiber grating-based signal conditioning. His work links fundamental research to applied science and spans physics and engineering. Benjamin’s research into new classes of nonlinear nanophotonic waveguides fabricated in chalcogenide has created a new paradigm for ultrafast all-optical signal processing. His discoveries of Bragg solitons and demonstration of slow light-enhanced nonlinear optics in photonic crystals are seminal results in nonlinear optics. His research into optical fibers tuned using fluids has established a new field of interdisciplinary research - optofluidics, now pursued by numerous leading research groups around the world.
Professional Activities and Awards: Eggleton is the author or coauthor of more than 500 journal publications, which have been cited 25,000 times according to Web of Science with an h-number of 82 (113 in google scholar). Eggleton is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (AAS), the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE), the Optical Society of America, IEEE Photonics and SPIE. He was President of the Australian Optical Society, has served as Editor-in-Chief for Optics Communications (2007-2015), and served on the Board of Governors for the IEEE Photonics Society. Eggleton's awards include the Adolph Lomb Medal from the Optical Society, the ICO Prize from the International Commission on Optics and the Australian Prime Ministers Malcolm Mackintosh Award for Physical Scientist of the Year.
Shaghik Atakaramians – Associate Editor
The University of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
https://research.unsw.edu.au/people/dr-shaghik-atakaramians
Shaghik Atakaramians is a Scientia Senior Lecturer and Leader of THz Photonics Group at the School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications at UNSW Sydney. She was awarded a PhD in Electrical & Electronic Engineering from University of Adelaide with the University Doctoral Research Medal for outstanding research in 2011. Shaghik worked at the Institute of Photonics and Optical Science (IPOS) [2011-2017] and The Centre for Ultrahigh bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems (CUDOS) [2012-2014] at the University of Sydney first as a postdoctoral fellow and then as research fellow.
Research Interests: Shaghik’s current research focuses on developing integrated metadevices for THz wireless communication. Her main topics of interest includeterahertz (THz) radiation and its application, including waveguides/fibres, waveguide-based devices in particular topologically protected, and hybrid photonic crystal waveguide-base devices, and metasurfaces for next generation of wireless communication.
Professional Activities and Awards: Shaghik has co-authored more than 80 scientific publications in highly ranked journals and prestigious international conferences. She served as organizing committee of CLEO PR (2020), QPCC (2016), and IPOS Symposium (2012), and as technical program committee of CLEO PR (2000) and ACOFT (2018). She served as Secretary and Vice-Chair of IEEE-WIE South Australia branch (2009-2010). Shaghik has received a number of prizes and awards including Eng Future Women Leaders Conference Award (2019), UNSW Women in Engineering Visitor Funding Scheme (2019), UNSW Scientia Fellowship (2018) and Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) from the Australian Research Council (2014).
Luca Carletti - Associate Editor
University of Brescia
Brescia, Italy
https://nora.unibs.it/staff/luca-carletti
Luca obtained an MSc in Physics and Nanotechnologies from the Technical University of Denmark and a Telecommunication Engineering degree from the University of Padova. In 2015, he earned his Ph.D. from the Ecole Centrale de Lyon, focusing on integrated material platforms for nonlinear optics. During his post-doctoral research from 2015 to 2018 at the University of Brescia he pioneered the field of nonlinear optical phenomena in sub-wavelength dielectric nanostructures. From 2018 to 2020 he was the recipient of a STARS grant (project Pulsar) funded by the University of Padova and worked as a Research Fellow at the Department of Information Engineering at University of Padova. In 2020, Luca became an Assistant Professor for the Department of Information Engineering at the University of Brescia, and in 2023, he advanced to the position of Associate Professor, where he continues his research on nonlinear nanophotonics in dielectric nanostructures and metasurfaces.
Research Interests: Luca’s current research focuses on nonlinear optical effects in optical nanostructures. His main areas of interest include nonlinear nanophotonics, dielectric and semiconductor nanoresonators, plasmonic structures, and dielectric metasurfaces.
Professional Activities and Awards: Luca has (co-)authored more than 100 publications in peer-reviewed journals and international conferences and 2 book chapters. He has been awarded a PRIN grant funded by the Italian Ministry for Education (MIUR) in 2023, a STARS@UNIPD grant funded by the University of Padova in 2018, and he has been the recipient of an Erasmus-Mundus Individual Fellowship (NANOPHI) in 2017 and a TIME fellowship in 2008. He is a member of Italian Society of Electromagnetism (SiEm), IEEE, and OSA.
Ling Fu - Associate Editor
Hainan University
Haikou, China
https://hd.hainanu.edu.cn/lixue/info/1019/3465.htm
Ling Fu is a professor in School of Physics and Optical Engineering at Hainan University in China. She received her BE degree (1999) in Optoelectronic Instrumentation and Technology, and the ME degree (2002) in Physical Electronics from Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China. She gained her PhD (2007) at Swinburne University of Technology in Australia with a thesis classified as being of the highest order. She joined Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics (from 2007-2022). She was the executive dean of School of Engineering Sciences (from 2013-2021). She is currently deputy director of Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biomedical Photonics (from 2017), general secretary of the National Higher Education Steering Committee for Biomedical Engineering, Ministry of Education of China (from 2018).
Research Interests: Prof. Fu's major contributions to biomedical optics include methods for endoscopic microscopy, imaging of behaving animals, and clinical applications. Her research on pulse delivery, cantilever scanners, miniaturized objective, and tissue imaging enabled fiber-optic confocal/nonlinear endomicroscopy for imaging living subjects or internal organs. Her multidisciplinary work translates optoelectronic research into biomedical applications. Microscopic methods and highly sensitive, integrated, multi-channel fiber photometry have been successfully applied by biologists to memory circuit studies and neuron encoding. Optical biopsy techniques and instruments have been adopted by more than 40 hospitals for high-resolution diagnosis at single cell resolution.
Professional Activities and Awards: Prof. Fu has published many high-quality papers, including more than 50 in international journals as first or corresponding author. She has delivered more than 40 invited talks worldwide. She holds more than 30 granted patents. She was awarded New Century Excellent Talents of Ministry of Education of China (2008), Innovation Talents for Wuhan Optics Valley (2013), National Science Fund for Excellent Young Scholars (2015), Technology Talents of Ezhou City (2017). She was elected to Fellow of OPTICA (Formerly OSA) in 2019, Fellow of SPIE in 2021. She has contributed to a number of international conferences and journals. In particular, she served as a co-chair of Neural Imaging and Sensing Conference in Photonics West (from 2019), a program chair of the OSA 100th annual meeting (2016). Since 2008, she made a special effort to launch and run “Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences", which is the only peer-reviewed biophotonics journal in the Asia Pacific Rim. She has served six international journals as assistant managing editor, senior editor, associate editor, etc. She worked tirelessly to encourage more women to join the science, technology and engineering community. Her picture was profiled in SPIE Women in Optics (2014), Women in the Optics and Photonics Workplace Booklet (2016), Faces of OPTICA (2021).
Xuhan Guo - Associate Editor
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Shanghai, China
https://otip.sjtu.edu.cn
Xuhan Guo received his BSc (2009) in Optoelectronic Information Engineering from Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China, and Ph.D. (2014) in Electrical Engineering from University of Cambridge, UK. He conducted his research in University of Cambridge as the research associate from 2013 to 2017. He joined the faculty of Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China and the lab for optical transmission and integrated photonics (OTIP) in 2017. Currently he is the associate professor and member of the State Key Laboratory of Advanced Optical Communication Systems and Networks.
Research Interests: Xuhan’s research focuses on metamaterials, neuromorphic computing in photonics and integrated photonics including silicon photonics.
Professional Activities and Awards Xuhan has (co-)authored approximately 50 peer-reviewed papers. He is the secretary of the IEEE Photonics Society Shanghai chapter. He has served as an associate editor of IET Optoelectronics (2018-2021), a guest editor of Journal of Semiconductors (2019). He was a workshop& industry forum co-chair of ACP 2021. He also served as a TPC member of a number of international conferences including ECOC (2018-), CLEO-PR (2018-2022) and GFP (2019).
Mohammed Hassan – Associate Editor
The University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ, USA
https://sites.arizona.edu/mohammedhassan/
Mohammed Hassan is a Professor of Physics and Optical Sciences at The University of Arizona. He earned his Ph.D. in 2013 from the Max-Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Munich, Germany. He then joined Caltech as a postdoctoral scholar in 2017. Hassan is also a faculty member in the BIO5 Institute at the University of Arizona
Research Interests: Hassan's research focuses on imaging the quantum electron motion in action. He developed the attosecond electron microscopy, which he coined "attomicroscopy". He used this tool to image the electron motion in the solid state. This electron imaging opens a new window to the quantum world and promises many breakthroughs in physics, chemistry, and information technology.
Moreover, Hassan's group developed a high-power "attosecond light field synthesizer" to generate tailored attosecond optical fields to control quantum electron motion on demand. He utilized this compatibility to demonstrate the attosecond all-optical switching and petahertz optoelectronics. Also, he used this capability to encode data on ultrafast laser pulses, which paved the way to transfer data with petahertz speed and develop digital ultrafast optoelectronics, opening a new era in communication and information technology.
Furthermore, he established a new all-optical-based methodology to sample the waveforms of the ultrafast laser pulses and measure the electronic delay response in neutral matter.
Professional Activities and Awards: Hassan's breakthroughs and scientific work achievements have been published in high-profile journals, and he has many patents in Attosecond electron imaging and microscopy, Petahertz Optical Switches and transistors, and All-optical laser field sampling. Hassan received the international Max-Planck fellowship in 2009 and the Air Force Young Investigator Award (YIP) in 2019. Hassan also received many prestigious awards for his attomicroscopy imaging project from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation in 2018 and the W. M. Keck Foundation in 2019. Recently, Hassan was awarded the inaugural AFOSR Director's Research Initiative (DRI) Award 2022. And the 2022 Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Minority-Serving Institutions (HBCUs/MSIs). Hassan represented the OPTICA (formerly OSA) and National Photonics Initiative (NPI) on Congressional Visits to advocate science in the USA. He has many activities to promoted the STEM field and to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion in science.
Christelle Monat - Associate Editor
Materials and Surface Sciences and Institute of Nanotechnology
École Centrale Lyon
Ecully, France
https://www.ec-lyon.fr/en/contacts/christelle-monat
After obtaining her Ph.D. on integrated microlasers from Ecole Centrale de Lyon, France in 2003, Christelle worked for two years at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland on single photon sources. She joined the Centre for Ultra-high Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems (CUDOS) at the University of Sydney in 2005, where she served as the project leader of the Slow light program between 2007 and 2010. In 2010, she was appointed Associate Professor at Ecole Centrale de Lyon, where she carries out her research on integrated nonlinear optics within the Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon (INL), France.
Research Interests: Christelle’s current research focuses on the use of hybrid integrated material platforms and devices for all-optical information processing. Her main areas of interest include slow light in photonic crystals, graphene, integrated microlasers, silicon photonics, nonlinear optics on a chip, heterogeneous material integration, and nanostructures.
Professional Activities and Awards Christelle received the Fresnel Prize from the European Physical Society in 2011, and the Fabry de Gramont Prize from the French Optical Society in 2015. She is a Junior member of the Institut Universitaire de France and an Honorary Associate Professor at the University of Sydney since 2012. She has been awarded a Marie Curie Fellowship in 2012 and a European ERC consolidator grant in 2015. She is co-chair of the “Photonic crystal materials and devices†symposium at the SPIE Photonics Europe Conference and she serves as a scientific expert for the Observatory of Micro and Nanotechnologies (OMNT) in France, for the "Materials and Devices for Optics" topic.
Alexander Szameit - Associate Editor
University of Rostock
Institute of Physics
Rostock, Germany
https://www.optics.physik.uni-rostock.de/en/
After studying at the Martin-Luther-Universität Halle/Wittenberg and the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Alex completed his doctorate in 2007 at the latter. Alex carried out his post-doctoral research at the Technion in Haifa, Israel in the group of Mordechai Segev before accepting a position at the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität as Assistant Professor in 2011. In 2016 he was appointed full professor at the University of Rostock and holds the chair of Experimental Solid-State Optics.
Research Interests: Alex’s research covers optics in periodic media, light dynamics in photonic waveguide arrays, optical solitons, non-hermitian photonics, integrated quantum optics, and topological photonics.
Professional Activities and Awards: Alex has published more than 150 reviewed papers and has given numerous invited talks. He has received several prestigious research awards, such as the dissertation price of the German Physical Society 2008, the award of the German Society for Laser Technology 2011, the OSA Adolph Lomb Medal 2014 and the Rudolph Kaiser Award 2015.
Paul Westbrook - Associate Editor
OFS Laboratories
Berkeley Heights, NJ, USA
After completing a Ph.D. in Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1998, Paul joined the Optical Fiber Research Department at Lucent Technologies, Bell Laboratories. He is currently a technical manager at OFS Labs, which was formed after the sale of the Lucent optical fiber business to Furukawa in 2001. He has worked on several topics in optical physics, including photoresponse of superconductors, nonlinear effects in periodic structures, optical fiber gratings, fiber sensors, polarization measurement, and photonic crystal fibers.
Research Interests: Paul’s research interests include fiber devices, polarization optics, fiber sensing, fiber lasers, nonlinear optics, fiber gratings, and optical fiber telecommunications.
Professional Activities and Awards: Paul has coauthored more than 50 journal articles and conference papers, and his work has resulted in more than 40 U.S. and international patents. He has served on various conference committees, including IPC, OFC, CLEO, CLEO Europe, BGPP, and OECC and was previously an associate editor for IEEE Photonics Technology Letters.