Scientific Career at MPQ
Building a career in science and academia is a challenging endeavour. Nonetheless, many researchers have gone through this process successfully, and became well established or even leaders in their field afterwards. The Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics is an ideal environment for excellent researchers who aspire to pursue a career in quantum optics - be it in academia or in industry or start-ups. Three of our senior scientists, Dr Mari Carmen Bañuls from the Theory Division, Dr Philipp Preiss from the Many-Body Systems Division, and Dr Dmitrii Kormin from the Laboratory of Attosecond Physics share their own perspectives and opinions on a scientific career in quantum optics and why they think the MPQ is the perfect (starting) place for it. The film was recorded at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in June 2024 and produced with the support of ScienceRelations. Concept: Katharina Jarrah, Krischan Dietmaier Camera: Moritz Frisch Editing: Krischan Dietmaier Copyright: Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics

Doing your PhD at MPQ

Ferenc Krausz - Attosecond Physics (VIDEO PORTRAIT)

Women in Quantum Optics (VIDEO PORTRAIT)

The Dome Paradox: A Loophole in Newton's Laws

The Race to Harness Quantum Computing's Mind-Bending Power | The Future With Hannah Fry

Gerhard Rempe - Quantum Dynamics (VIDEO PORTRAIT)

Nobel Prize lecture: Demis Hassabis, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2024

Terence Tao: Nobody Understands Why AI Actually Works

This is not the AI we were promised | The Royal Society

Why I Left Quantum Computing Research

What Does a QUANTUM PHYSICIST Do All Day? | REAL Physics Research at Cambridge University

Theodor Hänsch - Laser Spectroscopy (VIDEO PORTRAIT)

Yann LeCun: World Models: Enabling the next AI revolution

How To Think SO CLEARLY People Assume You're A Genius

8 science theses that shook the world

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The Hardest Questions in Physics | World Science Festival

How AI Cracked the Protein Folding Code and Won a Nobel Prize

Quantum Computing Expert Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

