Conference Agenda

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Read about the Topical Meetings and sessions of the conference

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Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 28th June 2025, 04:54:11pm CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Date: Monday, 09/Sept/2024
11:30am - 1:00pmRegistration opening
Location: AULA MAGNA
1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Sebastian Riese
Location: A.2.2
1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Ignacio Moreno Soriano
Location: A.2.4
1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Jacopo Bertolotti
Location: A.2.1
1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Katerina Kusova
Location: A.2.3
2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Oliver Fähnle
Location: A.2.2
2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Stefania Campopiano
Location: A.2.4
2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Giovanni Pellegrini
Location: A.2.1
2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Luca Sortino
Location: A.2.3
4:00pm - 4:30pmCoffee Break
4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Roozbeh Shokri
Location: A.2.2
4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Dawson Bonneville
Location: A.2.4
4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Alberto Puliafito
Location: A.2.1
4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Francesca Intonti
Location: A.2.3
Date: Tuesday, 10/Sept/2024
8:15am - 8:45amRegistration
8:45am - 9:30amOPENING CEREMONY
Location: AULA MAGNA
9:30am - 10:15amPLENARY SPEECH by Anna C. Peacock "Silicon core fibers for nonlinear photonics: Progress and trends"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Anna C. Peacock is a Professor of Photonics within the Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) at the University of Southampton.  She obtained her BSc and MSc in Physics from The University of Auckland (New Zealand), before moving to the ORC to undertake a PhD in Nonlinear Fibre Optics. She was subsequently awarded a Royal Academy of Engineering Research Fellowship, in recognition of her pioneering work on fiberized semiconductor devices. Anna now heads the Nonlinear Semiconductor Photonics group, where the focus of her research is on the design and development of novel semiconductor waveguides. She is a fellow of the Optical Society (FOSA), the IEEE Photonics Society (FIEEE), and the Institute of Physics (FInstP). She is currently serving as a Deputy Director of the ORC, responsible for the Photonics Systems, Circuits and Sensors group.

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The nascent field of silicon core fibres is attracting increased interest as a means to exploit the excellent optical and optoelectronic functionality of the semiconductor material directly within the fibre geometry. Compared to their planar counterparts, this new class of waveguide retains many advantageous properties of the fibre platforms such as flexibility, cylindrical symmetry, and long waveguide lengths. Furthermore, owing to the robust glass cladding it is also possible to employ standard fibre post-processing procedures to tailor the waveguide dimensions and reduce the optical losses over a broad wavelength range, of particular use for nonlinear applications. This presentation will review progress in the development of nonlinear devices from the silicon core fibre platform and outline exciting future prospects for the field.

10:15am - 10:45amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
10:45am - 11:30amPLENARY SPEECH by Miles Padgett "Fully flexible micro-endoscopy with a single core fibre the thickness of human hair"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Miles Padgett is a Royal Society Research Professor and also holds the Kelvin Chair of Natural Philosophy at the University of Glasgow in the UK.

His research team covers all things optical, from the basic ways in which light behaves as it pushes and twists the world around us, to the application of new optical techniques in imaging and sensing. They are currently using the classical and quantum properties of light to explore: the laws of quantum physics in accelerating frames, microscopes that see through noise, shaped light that overcomes diffraction-limited resolution and endoscopes the width of a human hair.

He is a Fellow both of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Royal Society (the UK's national academy), in addition to subject specialist societies. He has won various national and international prizes including, in 2019, the Rumford Medal of the Royal Society and in 2021 the Quantum Electronics and Optics Prize of the European Physical Society. Since 2019 he has been identified by Web of Science as a globally highly-cited researcher.

Miles is currently the Principal Investigator of QuantIC, the UK's Centre of excellence for research, development and innovation in quantum enhanced imaging, bringing together eight Universities with more than 40 industry partners.

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Miles Padgett and Simon Mekhail, The University of Glasgow

Endoscopic imaging systems based upon bundles of optical fibres are commonplace across medical and industrial applications. However, even just one of these optical fibres, less that 100µm in diameter, transmits enough spatial modes to relay an entire image, but intermodal dispersion rephases the output modes such that any input image becomes unrecognisable at the output. This problem can be overcome by measuring the transmission matrix of the fibre and using the inverse of the matrix to set the required input light fields to produce a scanning spot over the scene at the output. The backscattered light from this spot can then be measured to create an image of the scene. A current limitation is that the matrix is time consuming to measure and the required input beams time-consuming to calculate. Furthermore, each time the fibre is moved the matrix needs to be remeasured and the input beam recalculated. Here we show that the use of high-speed cameras and GPU computing can reduce this measurement and calculation time to a few 10s seconds, inspiring new modes of operation. When combined with the use of graded index fibres to minimises the sensitivity of the matrix to movement of the fibre, we show that 5-10 rapidly pre-recorded matrices are sufficient to create an imaging system that works over a wide range of fibre positions, giving near continuous imaging from a compact instrument. Such ultra-minimally invasive imaging systems have many uses in inspection and medical applications.

11:30am - 11:45amCelebration: 50th anniversary of passive radiative cooling in Naples
Location: AULA MAGNA
11:45am - 1:15pmTOM9 S1: Bound States, Topological and Quantum Photonics
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Vito Mocella, CNR, Italy
11:45am - 1:15pmFS3 S1: Passive Radiative Cooling 1
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Anna Castaldo, ENEA, Italy
Session Chair: Lorenzo Pattelli, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRiM), Italy
11:45am - 1:15pmEU S1: EU Project Session: Introduction
Location: AULA MAGNA

This session will end with a 30-minute round table discussion.

11:45am - 1:15pmIMOTS S1: Industrial mastering of optical technologies and systems
Location: A.2.1a
Session Chair: Oliver Faehnle, OST – Ostschweizer Fachhochschule, Switzerland
Session Chair: Marco Hanft, Carl Zeiss AG, Germany

Invited speakers:
Monica Materano, EYE4NIR SRL (IT)
Title: Electrically Tunable Dual-Band VIS/SWIR Imaging and Sensing

Simon Thiele, Printoptix GmbH (DE)
Title: Fabrication of complex freeform micro-optics by femtosecond 3D printing

Jyrki Saarinen, University of Eastern Finland (FI)
Title: Mastering emerging technologies into business from research to startups and beyond

Adam Mazur, 3D AG (CH)
Title: Micro & Nano Lab. Technologies

11:45am - 1:15pmFS4 S1: Multimodal Imaging techniques
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Francesca Rosi, National Reserach Council CNR, Italy
11:45am - 1:15pmTOM2 S1: Holography and Radiometry
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Andrea Mario Rossi, National Metrology Institute of Italy, Italy
11:45am - 1:15pmTOM1 S1: Silicon Photonics and integrated optics I
Location: A.1.1
Session Chair: Pavel Cheben, nrc, Canada
1:15pm - 2:15pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM9 S2: Resonant Photonics
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Ivo Rendina, CNR, Italy
2:15pm - 3:45pmFS3 S2: Passive Radiative Cooling 2
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Anna Castaldo, ENEA, Italy
Session Chair: Lorenzo Pattelli, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRiM), Italy
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM3 S1: Optics Design and Fabrication I
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Oliver Faehnle, OST – Ostschweizer Fachhochschule, Switzerland
2:15pm - 3:45pmEU S2: EU Project Session: Quantum and more
Location: A.2.1a

This session will begin with a 5-minute introduction to the session, followed by the scheduled talks.

2:15pm - 3:45pmFS4 S2: Multi-modal spectroscopy techniques
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Daniela Comelli, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM2 S2: Ellipsometry
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Vittorio Cecconi, Loughborough University, United Kingdom
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM1 S2: Silicon Photonics and integrated optics II
Location: A.1.1
Session Chair: Graham Trevor Reed, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
3:45pm - 4:15pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
4:15pm - 5:00pmPLENARY SPEECH by Hatice Altug "Integrated Metasurfaces for Life Science and Biomedical Applications"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Hatice Altug received her Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Stanford University (U.S.) in 2007. She is professor at Ecole Polytechnique since 2013 and leading BioNanoPhotonic Systems Laboratory. Prior to EPFL, she was professor at Boston University from 2007 to 2013. Her research is focused in the application of nanophotonics to life sciences and biomedical fields with the development of biosensing, spectroscopy and bioimaging systems. Prof. Altug is the recipient of numerous awards including European Physical Society Emmy Noether Distinction, Optical Society of America Adolph Lomb Medal, U.S. Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, IEEE Photonics Society Young Investigator Award and Koc University Science Medal. She received European Commission ERC Consolidator and Proof of Concept Grants, U.S. Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award, U.S. National Science Foundation CAREER Award, Massachusetts Life Science Center New Investigator Award. In 2011, she has been named to Popular Science Magazine's "Brilliant 10" list. She is fellow of Optical Society of America and senior member of SPIE.

Hatice's laboratory web-site: https://www.epfl.ch/labs/bios/
Twitter Handle: @EPFL_altug_lab

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Emerging healthcare needs, including global healthcare, personalized medicine, and point-of-care applications are demanding breakthrough advancements in diagnostic and bioanalytical tools. Towards this goal, our lab is developing next-generation nanophotonic lab-on-a-chip systems offering high performance in accuracy, response time, integration, throughput, and affordability while reducing complexity, cost and device footprint. We build optical biosensors, spectroscopy, bioimaging and microarray technologies to sensitively detect and analyze biological samples, including disease biomarkers, misfolded protein aggregates, nucleic acids, drugs, and living cells. To achieve our objectives we uniquely combine nanophotonics with advanced nanofabrication, microfluidics, surface chemistry, and data science techniques. In particular, we engineer optical metasurfaces exploiting plasmonics and dielectric resonators to fundamentally increase interaction of light with nanometric sized biomolecules. In this talk, I will present some of our recent works on surface enhanced mid-infrared spectroscopy such as an AI-aided optofluidic biosensor capable of differentiating misfolded disease proteins and high-Q gradient metasurfaces for ultra-broadband operation as well as describe nanophotonic single-cell and organoid microarrays that can enable high-throughput monitoring of extracellular secretion for screening applications.

5:00pm - 5:30pmEOS Honorary member and Fellow Ceremony
Location: AULA MAGNA
5:30pm - 6:45pmIndustrial Optics Podium Session
Location: AULA MAGNA

Invited Speakers:

Adèle Morisset, AeroDIODE, CTO and Co-founder

José Valverde Sánchez, Holoeye, Development Engineer

Reinhard Windemuth, Photonics Connect, Sales Director

Peter Zghaib, ENGIE, Research Engineer

6:45pm - 9:00pmNetworking reception

With drinks and food. Open for everyone.

Date: Wednesday, 11/Sept/2024
8:15am - 8:45amRegistration
8:45am - 10:15amTOM1 S3: Silicon Photonics and integrated optics III
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Pierre Berini, University of Ottawa, Canada
8:45am - 10:15amTOM9 S3: Optical Materials:Properties and processing
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Concita Sibilia, Università di Roma La Sapienza, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM4 S1: Imaging I: High resolution microscopy
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Francesca Bragheri, Italian National Research Council - CNR, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM3 S5: Optics Design and Fabrication V
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Jens Bliedtner, Ernst-Abbe-Uiversity of Applied Sciences Jena, Germany
8:45am - 10:15amTOM7 S1: Ultrafast beam and pulse shaping
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Frédéric Druon, Laboratoire Charles Fabry, France
8:45am - 10:15amFS5 S1: Machine Learning Application to Spectroscopy and Imaging
Location: A.2.3a
Session Chair: Birgit Stiller, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Germany
8:45am - 10:15amTOM2 S3: Classical and Quantum Enhanced Interferometry
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Andrea Mario Rossi, National Metrology Institute of Italy, Italy
10:15am - 10:45amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
10:45am - 11:30amPLENARY SPEECH by Kishan Dholakia "Viewing life without labels: Advanced biomedical imaging approaches for the preimplantation embryo"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Kishan Dholakia is an Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow and Director of the newly established Centre of Light for Life at the University of Adelaide. He is also a Professor at the University of St Andrews, Scotland.

His team’s works on a broad range of fundamental and interdisciplinary aspects of photonics, using structured (shaped) light fields. As an example, his group has pioneered the understanding and use of propagation invariant beams in imaging, optical manipulation and cell nanosurgery. Present topics in the group focus on imaging, sensing and manipulation. They include speckle metrology, advanced light sheet imaging including label-free approaches and optical trapping, including rotational levitated optomechanics. His group has been central to addressing key biological problems with such advanced photonics.

He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Optical Society and SPIE. He has won a number of national and international awards including the R.W. Wood Prize of the Optical Society (2016), the IOP Thomas Young Medal and Prize (2017) and SPIE Dennis Gabor Award (2018). His work in light sheet imaging and manipulation has been seen very successful industry translation, with instruments used in over ten countries worldwide.

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In this talk I will describe the use of a range of advanced photonics-based approaches of light sheet microscopy and digital holographic microscopy for label-free imaging. A driver for this work is the understanding of the development of the pre-implantation mammalian embryo [1-4] and improve IVF outcomes.

Embryo quality is a crucial factor affecting live birth outcomes. However, an accurate diagnostic for embryo quality remains elusive in the IVF clinic. Exploiting advanced optical imaging can assess the embryo in 3D and determine its metabolic rate and other physical parameters. This may ultimately prove to be a new multimodal diagnostic approach for embryo health.

Cellular metabolism is a key regulator of energetics, cell growth, regeneration, and homeostasis. The endogenous metabolic cofactors, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) (NAD(P)H) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) can be imaged through their autofluorescence. By performing this with hyperspectral imaging at subcellular resolution may assist in determining embryo viability in a clinical setting. Such hyperspectral imaging can be used to determine the ploidy status of the embryo [1]. By using new implementations of light sheet imaging, we can extend this imaging to 3D [2]. Separately, we can tailor digital holographic microscopy (DHM) to measure spatio-temporal changes in refractive index during the development of the embryo that are reflective of its lipid content. Accumulation of intracellular lipid is known to compromise embryo health thus making this a further useful approach for diagnosis [3]. Overall, advanced photonics adds useful, label-free multimodal information for IVF success and can be gentle enough to not effect viability [4].

[1] T. C. Y. Tan et al., Hum. Reprod. 37(1), 14–29 (2021).

[2] Josephine Morizet et al., ACS Photonics 10, 4177-4187 (2023)

[3] George O. Dwapanyin et al., Biomed. Opt. Express 14, 3327-3342 (2023)

[4] C. A. Campugan et al., J. Assist. Reprod. Genet. 39(8), 1825–1837 (2022)

11:30am - 12:15pmPLENARY SPEECH by Claudio Conti "Photonic spin glasses: from fundamentals to combinatorial optimization and machine learning"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Claudio Conti is associate professor at the Department of Physics of the University Sapienza in Rome. He has been Director of the Institute of Complex Systems of the Italian National Research Council. He received the New Talent Grant from the Research Center Enrico Fermi and a Humboldt fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light. He participated in various research projects, including an ERC Grant, “Light and Complexity,” that led to the first observation of replica symmetry breaking, cited in the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2021. CC authored over 250 articles in top-level journals; his research interests encompass complex systems, machine learning, photonics, and nonlinear optics with applications such as Ising machines and fundamental tests of quantum mechanics.

Claudio's website: complexlight.org

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Nonlinear and disordered photonic systems exhibit intricate dynamics, encompassing extreme events like rogue waves and non-trivial statistical behaviors. Remarkably, the application of spin-glass theory provides a fitting theoretical framework to elucidate the complexities inherent in these nonlinear optical systems. Experiments involving disordered lasers and nonlinear optical propagation have unveiled direct evidence of Replica Symmetry-Breaking transitions, a pivotal prediction of the spin-glass theory that had eluded confirmation for decades.
While spin-glass theory has found prominence in modern machine learning, combinatorial optimizations, and artificial intelligence, its interdisciplinary connections with photonic systems present a compelling opportunity. We explore the potential to harness these connections to develop innovative non von Neumann devices tailored for large-scale computing.
An introductory review of photonic spin glasses theory and experiments is presented alongside new findings that pave the way toward a new generation of computing devices demonstrating superior scalability compared to existing quantum annealers and Ising machines.

References

1. N. Ghofraniha, et al., Experimental evidence of replica symmetry breaking in random lasers, Nature Communications 6, 6058 (2015)

2. D. Pierangeli, et al., Large-scale photonic Ising machine by spatial light modulation, Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 213902 (2019)

3. M. Calvanse Strinati, et al., Hyperscaling in the coherent hyperspin machine, Phys. Rev. Lett. 132 (2024)

12:15pm - 1:15pmPOSTER SESSION 1

All posters are presented on both days: at Poster Session 1 and at Poster Session 2.

1:15pm - 2:15pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM1 S4: Silicon Photonics and integrated optics IV
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Graham Trevor Reed, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM5 S1: Theoretical & computational nanophotonics
Location: A.1.1b
Session Chair: Nicolas Bonod, CNRS, France
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM10 S1: Optofluidics devices: developments and applications
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Orlando Frazão, INESC TEC, Portugal
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM4 S2: Diagnosis and natural structures
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Pablo Loza-Alvarez, ICFO, Spain
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM3 S3: Optics Design and Fabrication III
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Marco Hanft, Carl Zeiss AG, Germany
2:15pm - 3:45pmEU S3: EU Project Session: Sensing and more
Location: A.2.1a

This session will begin with a 5-minute introduction to the session, followed by the scheduled talks.

2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM7 S2: Ultrafast Spectroscopy
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Maurizio Reduzzi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM6 S1: Nonlinear optical materials and applications
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Patricia Segonds, EOS, France
2:15pm - 3:45pmTOM2 S4: Modern Microscopic Nanometrology
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Stefanie Kroker, TU Braunschweig, Germany
3:45pm - 4:15pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM8 S1: Quantum photonics I
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Philipp Schneeweiss, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM5 S2: Nonlinear nanophotonics; Resonant light matter interaction
Location: A.1.1b
Session Chair: Riad Haidar, Onera, France
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM10 S2: Sensing and spectroscopy I
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Anna Chiara De Luca, IEOS-CNR, Italy
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM4 S3: Microfluidics and fabrication
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Annalisa Volpe, POLIBA, Italy
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM3 S4: Optics Design and Fabrication IV
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Marco Hanft, Carl Zeiss AG, Germany
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM7 S4: Ultrafast nonlinear optics and post-compression
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Anne-Lise Viotti, Lund University, Sweden
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM6 S2: Optical materials, synthesis and characterizations
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Monica Bollani, Institute for photonics and nanotechnologies - CNR, Italy
4:15pm - 5:45pmFS5 S2: Machine Learning in Nonlinear Optics and Photonics Systems
Location: A.2.3a
Session Chair: Goery Genty, Tampere University, Finland
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM2 S5: Advanced Optical (Nano-) Metrology
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Peter Petrik, Centre for Energy Research, Hungary
8:30pm - 11:59pmCONFERENCE DINNER
Date: Thursday, 12/Sept/2024
8:30am - 8:45amRegistration
8:45am - 10:15amTOM8 S2: Fast and THz nonlinear optics
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Kamel Bencheikh, Centre of Nanoscience and Naotechnolgy C2N-CNRS, France
8:45am - 10:15amTOM5 S3: Functional metasurfaces, active nanophotonics
Location: A.1.1b
Session Chair: Chiara Schiattarella, NEST, CNR-Istituto Nanoscienze and Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM10 S3: Optical instrumentation for measurements and monitoring
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Matthieu Roussey, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
8:45am - 10:15amTOM4 S4: Biosensing I: Bioluminescence and optical resonators
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Francesco Baldini, CNR, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM3 S2: Optics Design and Fabrication II
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Sven Schröder, Fraunhofer IOF, Germany
8:45am - 10:15amTOM7 S3: Attosecond Science and Technology
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Mauro Nisoli, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM6 S3: Nanomaterials and nanophotonics
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Tiziana Cesca, University of Padova, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amFS1 S1: Holography and Structured Light
Location: A.2.3a
Session Chair: Lorenzo Marrucci, Universita' di Napoli Federico II, Italy
Session Chair: Ignacio Moreno, Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Spain
10:15am - 10:45amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
10:45am - 11:30amPLENARY SPEECH by Fredrik Laurell "The Backward Wave Optical Parametric Oscillator"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Fredrik Laurell is a professor of physics at KTH, the Royal Institute of Technology. He is a Fellow of Optica and member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences. He has been the chairman of the Swedish Optical Society, and the Swedish national committee for optics (ICO). He cofounded PhotonicSweden, the national platform in Photonics, and chaired the Optics section at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and he work on leadership positions at EOS for more six years. He has authored or co-authored more than 300 scientific journal papers and 500 conference papers and he holds 18 patents. He has co-founded 5 companies and received the Göran Gustafsson Prize in Physics.

Laurell’s research spans studies of optical materials, fiber optics, nonlinear optics, and laser physics. He is particularly interested in pushing photonics into real world applications and works extensively with outreach activities.

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In this talk I will present the backward optical parametric oscillator (BWOPO), a new nonlinear device which have some unique properties. It is a single chip, quasi-phase matched, nanodomain-engineered crystal which, when pumped with an intense laser beam, generates a narrow-linewidth, frequency-stable, contra-directional down-converted beam, and a collinear beam that inherits the spectrum of the pump. Compared to regular optical parametric oscillator the BWOPO provides a very narrow spectrum, easily tunable without mode hops and with a high conversion efficiency. It is among other things excellently suited for differential absorption lidar (DIAL) spectroscopy. I will describe the BWOPO properties in details and how it can be used.

11:30am - 12:15pmPLENARY SPEECH by Chi-Kuang Sun "Advancing Surgical Biopsy with Nonlinear Optics: True-H&E rapid fresh pathology for tumor assessment"
Location: AULA MAGNA

Chi-Kuang Sun from the Taiwan Photonics Society (TPS), a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) partner with the European Optical Society (EOS), has been invited to give a plenary talk at EOSAM 2024.

Traditional workflow in surgical pathology involves multiple labor-intensive steps, such as tissue removal, fixation, embedding, sectioning, staining, and microscopic examination, which are time-consuming, costly, and require skilled technicians. Intraoperative tumor assessment (ITA) necessitates faster histological evaluation for real-time surgical guidance, typically using frozen section (FS) technique with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. However, an FS biopsy often comes with certain limitations, such as half-an-hour turnaround time, freezing artifacts, and potential tissue loss. To overcome these limitations, virtual H&E imaging modalities have been developed over the years aiming for rapid tissue imaging with microscopic details. However, such modalities often differ from the gold standard H&E characteristic appearance, primarily because of incorporating non-H&E contrast mechanisms, thus affecting diagnostic accuracy and applicability

In this talk, I will present True-H&E rapid fresh pathology, an innovative approach leveraging third-harmonic and two-photon signals from H and E dyes to produce optically-sectioned 2D images in fresh whole-mount tissues. Our method, invaluable for intraoperative tumor prognosis, eliminates the artifacts due to freezing, physical sectioning, and non-H&E staining, enabling pathologists to distinguish normal and tumor tissues without requiring special training., while meeting the whole-slide-imaging standard and enhancing the speed, safety, and accuracy.

12:15pm - 1:15pmPOSTER SESSION 2

All posters are presented on both days: at Poster Session 1 and at Poster Session 2.

To see the list of posters, please check Session 1

1:15pm - 2:15pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
2:15pm - 3:45pmAnnual General Assembly of EOS, AGA (for all EOS Members)
Location: AULA MAGNA
3:45pm - 4:15pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM8 S3: Quantum Photonics II
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Juan Sebastian Totero Gongora, Loughborough University, United Kingdom
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM5 S4: 2D materials, Optical materials
Location: A.1.1b
Session Chair: Otto Lambert Muskens, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM10 S4: Sensing and spectroscopy II
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Susana Silva, INESC TEC, Portugal
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM4 S5: Imaging II: Advancements in optical imaging
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Gilles Tessier, Sorbonne Université - Institut de la Vision, France
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM3 S6: Optics Design and Fabrication VI
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Sven Schröder, Fraunhofer IOF, Germany
4:15pm - 5:45pmFS2 S1: Fundamental studies
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Andrea Cusano, University of Sannio, Italy
4:15pm - 5:45pmTOM6 S4: Glasses and optical applications
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Azzedine Boudrioua, LPL, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, France
4:15pm - 5:45pmFS1 S2: Holography and Structured Light
Location: A.2.3a
Session Chair: Lorenzo Marrucci, Universita' di Napoli Federico II, Italy
Session Chair: Ignacio Moreno, Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Spain
Date: Friday, 13/Sept/2024
8:30am - 8:45amRegistration
8:45am - 10:15amFS1-TOM8: Joint session
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Ignacio Moreno, Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Spain
Session Chair: Kamel Bencheikh, Centre of Nanoscience and Naotechnolgy C2N-CNRS, France
8:45am - 10:15amTOM5 S5: Light in complex systems
Location: A.1.1b
Session Chair: Kristina Frizyuk, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM10 S5: Applications of Optics and Photonics I
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Ana Gebejes, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
8:45am - 10:15amTOM4 S6: Biosensing II: DNA-based biosensing and biomarker detection
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Edoardo De Tommasi, National Research Council - Institute of Applied Sciences and Intelligent Systems, Italy
8:45am - 10:15amTOM3 S7: Optics Design and Fabrication VII
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Daewook Kim, University of Arizona, United States of America
8:45am - 10:15amFS2 S2: Sensors and applications
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Sylvie Lebrun, Laboratoire Charles Fabry de l'Institut d'Optique, France
8:45am - 10:15amTOM6 S5: Optical materials and lasers
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Detlef Kip, Helmut Schmidt University, Germany
8:45am - 10:15amESR S1: Early Stage Researcher Session
Location: A.2.3b
Session Chair: Roman Vincent Calpe, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
Session Chair: Valeria Nocerino, University of Naples Parthenope, Italy

8:45 - 8:57
ID 294
Josep Martinez-Romeu: Chiral longitudinal forces in dielectric photonic waveguies 

8:57 - 9:09
ID 409
Jessica Alexandra Talamo Ruiz: Solvent role for electrospinning of PVDF-HFP nanofibrous coatings for passive radiative cooling applications

9:09 - 9:21
ID 463
Jérémy Werlé: Numerical modelling of wavelength-selective metasurfaces for thermal management of photovoltaic modules

9:21 - 9:33
ID 469
Elizabeth Mendoza Sandoval: Study of lattice spacing for lasing action in a plasmonic array

9:33 - 9:45
ID 413
Mohamed Mammeri: Single Mode rib waveguide design using Machine Learning techniques

9:45 - 9:57
ID 200
Miguel Cuenca Piqueras: Airy pulse generation in a dispersive injection-seeded frequency-shifting fiber loop

9:57 - 10:09
ID 274
Maddalena De Ros: Optical tweezers to investigate molecular binding mechanisms at the single-molecule level

10:09 - 10:15
Roman Calpe: EOS-Finland Student Club presentation

10:15am - 10:45amCoffee Break
10:45am - 12:15pmTOM8 S4: Nonlinear sources
Location: A.1.1a
Session Chair: Kamel Bencheikh, Centre of Nanoscience and Naotechnolgy C2N-CNRS, France
10:45am - 12:15pmTOM10 S6: Applications of Optics and Photonics II
Location: A.1.2
Session Chair: Susana Novais, INESCTEC, Portugal
10:45am - 12:15pmTOM4 S7: Biosensing III: Plasmonic biosensing
Location: A.1.6
Session Chair: Francesco Baldini, CNR, Italy
10:45am - 12:15pmTOM3 S8: Optics Design and Fabrication VIII
Location: A.1.7
Session Chair: Oliver Faehnle, OST – Ostschweizer Fachhochschule, Switzerland
10:45am - 12:15pmFS2 S3: Non linear optics and sources
Location: A.2.1b
Session Chair: Andrea Cusano, University of Sannio, Italy
10:45am - 12:15pmTOM6 S6: Doped materials and applications
Location: A.2.2
Session Chair: Azzedine Boudrioua, LPL, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, France
10:45am - 12:15pmFS1 S3: Holography and Structured Light
Location: A.2.3a
Session Chair: Lorenzo Marrucci, Universita' di Napoli Federico II, Italy
Session Chair: Ignacio Moreno, Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Spain
12:15pm - 12:25pmBest Student Presentation Awards
Location: AULA MAGNA
12:25pm - 12:35pmEOS Prize
Location: AULA MAGNA
12:35pm - 12:50pmJEOS-RP Highlight
Location: AULA MAGNA
12:50pm - 1:00pmCLOSING CEREMONY
Location: AULA MAGNA

 
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