Yuen-Ron Shen

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Yuen-Ron Shen (沈元壤) is a professor emeritus of physics at the University of California, Berkeley, known for his work on non-linear optics. He was born in Shanghai and graduated from National Taiwan University. He received his Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Harvard under physicist and Nobel Laureate Nicolaas Bloembergen in 1963, and joined the department of physics at Berkeley in 1964. In the early years, Dr. Shen was probably best known for his work on self-focusing and filament propagation of laser beams in materials.[1] In the 1970s and 1980s, he collaborated with Yuan T. Lee on the study of multiphoton dissociation of molecular clusters. The molecular-beam photofragmentation translational spectroscopy that they developed has clarified much of the initial confusion concerning the dynamics of infrared multiphoton dissociation processes.[2] In the 1980s and 1990s, Professor Shen developed various nonlinear optics methods for the study of material surfaces and interfaces.[3] Among these techniques, second-harmonic generation and sum frequency generation spectroscopy are best known and also widely used by scientists from various fields now. He has collaborated with Gabor Somorjai on the use of the technique of Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy to study catalyst surfaces.[4] He is the author of the book The Principles of Nonlinear Optics.[5] Professor Shen belongs to the prolific J. J. Thomson academic lineage tree. Currently, Professor Shen works in U. C. Berkeley and Fudan University in Shanghai.

Awards and honors

References

  1. Self-Focusing and Filaments of Light: Past and Present. Topics in Applied Physics 2009, 114, 3-19.
  2. Multi-Photon Dissociation of Polyatomic-Molecules. P. A. Schulz, A. S. Sudbo, D. J. Krajnovich, H. S. Kwok, Y. R. Shen, Y. T. Lee, Annu. Rev. Phys. Chem. 1979, 30, 379-409.
  3. Surface Properties Probed by 2nd Harmonic and Sum-Frequency Generation. Y. R. Shen, Nature 1989, 337, 519-525.
  4. Ethylene hydrogenation on Pt(111) monitored in situ at high pressures using sum frequency generation. P. S. Cremer, X. C. Su, Y. R. Shen, G. A. Somorjai, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118, 2942-2949.
  5. The Principles of Nonlinear Optics. Y. R. Shen, Wiley 2002. ISBN 978-0-471-43080-3. http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0471430803.html

External links