Source: https://physics.berkeley.edu/people/faculty/dmitry-budker
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 16:20:36+00:00

Document:
Dmitry Budker received his Ph.D. in physics from UC Berkeley in 1993 and was a postdoctoral researcher at the University until his faculty appointment in 1995. Born in the former USSR, Budker was a student at the Novosibirsk State University from 1980 until 1985, when he received an equivalent to MS with honors from the Department of Physics. He then served as a junior researcher at the Institute of Nuclear Physics, where he conducted research on laser spectroscopy of atoms. In 1994, Budker received the American Physical Society Award for Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Research in Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics. He is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award, a Fellow of the American Physical Society, and was a Miller Professor in 2003-2004.
Budker’s research interests are related to the study of violation of discrete symmetries – parity, time reversal invariance, and permutation symmetry for identical particles - using the methods of modern atomic physics. In particular, he has been involved in exploring the rare earth elements - samarium, dysprosium and ytterbium - where enhancement of P and P,T violating effects occurs due to close proximity of states with opposite nominal parity. More recently, he has also been involved in experimental search for temporal variation of fundamental “constants.” Such experiments involve many aspects and techniques of atomic physics, as well as of linear and nonlinear optics and spectroscopy. Some of the Budker group research involves experimental condensed-matter physics and nuclear magnetic resonance. Budker and his group are also studying applications of nonlinear optical phenomena in resonant vapors and in color centers in diamond to sensitive magnetometry. The group maintains a roughly 50-50 balance of fundamental-physics and applied projects.
Nuclear magnetic resonance and magnetic-resonance imaging with atomic magnetometers.
Collaborators in this work include D. English, A. Pines (UCB Chemistry), S. K. Lamoreaux (Yale), M. Auzinsh (Latvia), W. Gawlik (Poland), D. F. Jackson Kimball (CSUEB), P. Hemmer (Texas A&M), S. Rochester (Rochester Scientific, LLC), A. Sushkov (Yale/Harvard), V. Yashchuk (LBNL), V. Acosta (Hewlett Packard), S. Pustelny (Poland), A. Cingoz (JILA), K. Tsigutkin, M. Ledbetter, A. Park, N. A. Leefer, D. C. Hovde (Southwest Sciences, Inc.), A. Gordon (Israel), D. Bonaccini-Calia (ESO), R. Holzloehner (ESO), R. Folman (BGU, Israel), and many others. There are always several visitors and undergraduate students in the group. These experiments ideally suit the university environment since, in spite of their potential to produce results significant to our understanding of fundamental interactions, they are relatively small-scale; thus they can be carried out in a small research group and allow graduate and undergraduate students to actively participate in all aspects of the experiment - from planning and design and apparatus construction to data taking and analysis.
J. E. Stalnaker, D. Budker, S. J. Freedman, J. S. Guzman, S. M. Rochester, and V. V. Yashchuk, Dynamic Stark effect and forbidden-transition spectral lineshapes, Phys. Rev. A 73, 043416 (2006).
S. Xu, S. M. Rochester, V. V. Yashchuk, M. H. Donaldson, and D. Budker, Construction and applications of an atomic magnetic gradiometer based on nonlinear magneto-optical rotation, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77, 083106 (2006).
D. Budker, “Electrons in a shell,” Am. J. Phys. 66(7), 572 (1998).
S. Rochester, C. J. Bowers, D. Budker, D. DeMille, and M. Zolotorev, “Measurement of lifetimes and tensor polarizabilities of odd parity states of Sm I,“ Phys. Rev. A59(5), 3480 (1999).
D. DeMille, D. Budker, N. Derr, and E. Deveney, “Search for exchange-antisymmetric two-photon states, “ Phys. Rev. Lett.83(20), 3978 (1999).
D. Budker, V. Yashchuk, and M. Zolotorev, “Ultra-narrow features in magneto-optical rotation,” Phys. Rev. Lett.81(26), 5788 (1998).
D. Budker, D. F. Kimball, S. M. Rochester, and V. V. Yashchuk: “Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation via alignment-to-orientation conversion,“ Phys. Rev. Lett.85, 2088 (2000).
S. M. Rochester and D. Budker, “Atomic polarization visualized,” Am. Journ. Phys.69(3), 450 (2001).
A. T. Nguyen, G. D. Chern, D. Budker, and M. Zolotorev, “Efficient population transfer in a multi-level system,” Phys. Rev. A. 63, 013406 (2001).
B. DeBoo, D. F. Kimball, C.-H. Li, and D. Budker, “Multichannel Conical Emission and Parametric and Nonparametric Nonlinear Processes in Yb vapor,” JOSA B, 18(5), 639 (2001).
D. Budker and J. E. Stalnaker, Magnetoelectric Jones dichroism in atoms Phys. Rev. Lett., 91(26), 263901 (2003).

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