About
Graduate of the University of Athens, Greece, Professor Pavlos Lagoudakis received his PhD degree in Physics from the University of Southampton, UK in 2003 and conducted his postdoctoral research on optoelectronic properties of organic semiconductors at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich, Germany. In 2006, he returned to Southampton as Lecturer at the department of Physics and Astronomy, where he combined his expertise in inorganic and organic semiconductors and set up a new experimental activity on Hybrid Photonics.
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Research
Current research
Pavlos research interests include the field of polaritonics, with the first demonstration of polariton lasing at room temperature, and hybrid photonics, having realised experimentally the theoretical proposals of Dexter (1979) and Agranovich (1998) on hybrid organic-inorganic photonic devices for light harvesting and light emission respectively. For his contribution in the field of polaritonics and hybrid photonics Pavlos received the Quantum Electronics Young Scientist Prize from the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (Sydney, 2011).
Fields of active research: Condensed Matter Physics, Semiconductor Physics, Photonics, Polaritonics, Quantum Simulators, Coherent network-, Neuromorphic-, & Reservoir-computing
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Current research
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Publications
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Supervision
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Teaching
Photonics, Semiconductor Physics, Quantum Physics
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Biography
Graduate of the University of Athens, Greece, Pavlos received his PhD degree in Physics from the University of Southampton, UK in 2003 and conducted his postdoctoral research on optoelectronic properties of organic semiconductors at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich, Germany. In 2006, he returned to Southampton as Lecturer at the department of Physics and Astronomy, where he combined his expertise in inorganic and organic semiconductors and set up a new experimental activity on Hybrid Photonics. In 2008, Pavlos was appointed to a personal chair at the University of Southampton.
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Prizes
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