Generated by GPT-5-mini| Iacopo Carusotto | |
|---|---|
| Name | Iacopo Carusotto |
| Birth date | 1970s |
| Birth place | Florence |
| Nationality | Italian |
| Fields | Condensed matter physics, Quantum optics, Atomic physics |
| Institutions | Scuola Normale Superiore, CNRS, University of Trento, INO-CNR |
| Alma mater | University of Florence, Scuola Normale Superiore |
| Doctoral advisor | Giulio Natali |
Iacopo Carusotto is an Italian theoretical physicist known for contributions to non-equilibrium quantum systems and quantum fluids of light. He has held research and faculty positions in Italian and French institutions and collaborated with groups across Europe, North America, and Asia. His work spans theoretical developments and numerical modeling relevant to experiments at major laboratories and facilities.
Carusotto was born in Florence and studied physics at the University of Florence and the Scuola Normale Superiore. During his graduate training he worked on problems connected to Bose–Einstein condensation and superfluidity under supervision at institutions associated with INFM and later CNRS collaborations. His doctoral studies intersected with research communities active at the European Physical Society meetings and early experiments at JILA, MIT, and the École Normale Supérieure laboratories. Postgraduate interactions included scientific visits to groups at Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, University of Cambridge, and University of Trento.
He held postdoctoral and permanent positions at research centers including the Scuola Normale Superiore, the Institut d'Optique Graduate School, and research units affiliated with CNRS and CNR. Carusotto has been associated with the INO-CNR network and collaborative projects with the European Research Council, the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research, and national initiatives connected to FIRB programs. His teaching and supervision activities connected him with doctoral schools at the University of Trento, the University of Pisa, and summer schools organized by the International School of Physics "Enrico Fermi". He has been invited to give plenary and keynote lectures at conferences including meetings of the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of America, the International Conference on Atomic Physics, and the SPIE symposiums.
Carusotto's research centers on theoretical descriptions of quantum fluids, photonics, and driven-dissipative many-body systems. He developed theoretical frameworks for polariton condensates and exciton-polaritons in semiconductor microcavities that connect to experiments at facilities such as EPFL, CERN collaborations on photonics, and groups at Weizmann Institute of Science. His work on the non-equilibrium generalization of Bogoliubov theory and the description of superfluidity in light-matter systems informed experiments performed at Léon Brillouin Laboratory, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, and ICFO.
He contributed to proposals and analyses for observing analogues of Hawking radiation and black hole physics in nonlinear optical media and in Bose–Einstein condensates analogous platforms, engaging theoretical ideas common to researchers at Perimeter Institute, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Carusotto co-developed computational methods and numerical codes used for studying driven-dissipative lattice models and Bose–Hubbard model variants relevant to experiments at Harvard University, Stanford University, and Caltech. He has collaborated with condensed matter groups investigating topological photonics and linked his models to experiments at Yale University, UC Berkeley, and Nanyang Technological University.
His theoretical output has influenced measurement techniques and interpretations employed at facilities such as National Institute of Standards and Technology, Riken, and KEK. Collaborations extended to interdisciplinary connections with researchers at ETH Zurich, University of Oxford, Imperial College London, and Tokyo University on issues of coherence, fluctuations, and quantum correlations in light-matter systems.
Carusotto's work has been recognized by research grants and prizes from institutions including the European Research Council, the Italian Physical Society, and national award schemes managed by the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research. He has received invitations for named lectures at the International Conference on Quantum Fluids, the Gordon Research Conferences, and distinguished lecture series at CNRS laboratories. His publications have been highlighted in review articles by the Reviews of Modern Physics editorial committees and cited in contexts such as award citations from the European Physical Society and themed issues from Nature Physics and Physical Review Letters.
- Carusotto, I., and Ciuti, C., "Quantum fluids of light," a review in the context of polariton studies and non-equilibrium dynamics, cited across Physical Review X, Nature Photonics, and Reviews of Modern Physics themed compilations. - Carusotto, I., et al., theoretical papers on Hawking radiation analogues in optical systems, appearing in journals read by communities at Perimeter Institute, Max Planck Society, and CNRS. - Carusotto, I., contributions to driven-dissipative Bose–Hubbard model literature with implications for experiments at JILA, LENS, and INRIM. - Collaborative articles with groups at EPFL, ICFO, and Weizmann Institute of Science on coherence and condensation phenomena in microcavity polaritons. - Reviews and lecture notes commissioned for schools organized by Enrico Fermi Foundation, Les Houches School of Physics, and European School of Quantum Electronics.
Category:Italian physicists Category:Theoretical physicists