ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Olli V. Lounasmaa Memorial Prize awarded to Professor J.C. Séamus Davis

The winner of the 2020 prize tells us about his research in quantum materials
The Olli V Lounasmaa Memorial Prize 2020 awarded to JC Séamus Davis

The Olli V. Lounasmaa Memorial Prize is awarded once every four years to a scientist who has made outstanding contributions to advances in low temperature physics and related fields. It is named in honour of the founder of the Low Temperature Laboratory at Aalto University, and world-leading researcher in low temperature physics.

The 2020 prize has been awarded to Professor J.C. Séamus Davis for his pioneering research into visualizing electronic quantum matter at the atomic scale.

group operates laboratories at the University of Oxford, University College Cork, and Cornell University. ‘My work is in the development of the instruments for discovering and visualizing new quantum states of matter,’ says Professor Davis. The work is exploratory, setting out to find quantum states that haven’t been demonstrated in the real world before. ‘Common phases of matter like solids, liquids and gasses with properties like conducting electricity or being magnetic, are well known because materials we can pull out the ground have these properties,’ Professor Davis explains, ‘but quantum mechanics doesn’t limit us to just these phases and properties. There are many more phases and properties that could exist, we’ve just got to find and understand them.’ Professor Davis compares the field to Columbus’s discovery of the New World whilst searching for a route to the Indies, in that researchers set out into the unknown, discover unexpected new ‘continents’ and then have to explore and understand what they’ve found.

Professor Davis’s group members work together on research projects that use the complementary resources and instruments available at each site. Most recently, they have discovered and visualized the first Pair Density Wave state, a new state of matter comprising a crystal of electron Cooper-pairs, instead of the dissipationless fluid of Cooper-pairs that form a superconductor. ‘This is one of those newly discovered continents that we’re still working hard on uncovering.’ His team are also developing instruments to try and visualize the elusive quantum spin liquid, a state of matter which has been known to exist theoretically for decades, but has not yet been observed definitively in experiments. ‘When you build your own tools, you’re more likely to find something interesting. If we can visualize these spin liquid states at atomic scale it could be revolutionary, because when you can actually see things, you can understand them much better’ explains Professor Davis.

The award citation praises the work Professor Davis has done in developing the equipment and technology for low temperature physics:

‘He has pioneered the development and applications of electronic matter visualization techniques in the low temperature regime. Today, the instruments emulating his design have spawned a worldwide revolution in electronic quantum matter studies, allowing direct visualization of electronic matter. His persistent scientific and technological work has generated numerous advances in the understanding of strongly correlated superconductivity, changing the direction of discourse in the field of low temperature physics.’

The prize will be announced on September 4th 2020 at the international condensed matter physics conference CMD2020GEFES, organized online. The Prize Fund receives endowment from , the world’s leading manufacturer of customized cryogen-free, ultra-low temperature dilution refrigerators. Bluefors is a spin-off company from the Low Temperature Laboratory of Aalto University.

More information:

Professor Davis’s Research website
The Olli V. Lounasmaa memorial prize website /en/ovl-memorial-prize

Contact:

Professor Pertti Hakonen
Chair of the Olli V. Lounasmaa selection panel
Aalto University Department of Applied Physics
pertti.hakonen@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A woman in white stands in a theatrical dressing room with violet walls, a lit vanity mirror, and hanging clothes.
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Hämeenlinna Art Museum’s exhibition brings artworks to life through film

Hämeenlinna Art Museum will open a new exhibition Kehyskertomuksia: 24 fps / Reframing Cinema, produced in collaboration with the Aalto University Department of Film ELO.
Labratoriossa tutkija mittasi henkilön verenpainetta.
Cooperation, Studies Published:

New funding introduces health technology themes into FITech Network University's course offering

FITech Network University, a network of Finnish universities of technology coordinated by Aalto University, has been granted new funding that expands the network's course offering with themes related to health technology.
An eye by Matti Ahlgren.
Press releases Published:

New macular degeneration treatment the first to halt disease’s progression

Aalto University researchers have uncovered a promising way to treat the dry form of the age- related macular degeneration (AMD) in the early diagnosis phase that could potentially stop its progression. The novel treatment approach aims to strengthen the protective mechanisms of affected cells using heat, explains Professor Ari Koskelainen.
Group of people standing in a line holding certificates. A projector screen is visible behind them.
Awards and Recognition, Cooperation Published:

Aalto Doctoral Education Services Receives Unite! Award

Aalto's Unite! Doctoral Education Team, led by Dr Minna Söderqvist, received an award for their long-term efforts to enhance doctoral mobility and collaboration across the Unite! Alliance. The award ceremony took place during the XII Unite! DIalogue.