Peter A. Franken Collegiate Professor of Physics, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS)
4239 Homer A. Neal Lab
Labs: SB460, SB468, SB472 Randall Lab(764.6559)
phone: 734.763.9759
About
Professor Roberto Merlin was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He received the Licenciado en Ciencias Fisicas (M.S.) degree from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1973 and the Dr. rer. nat. (Ph.D.) degree from the University of Stuttgart, Germany, in 1978. His graduate advisor was Professor Manuel Cardona. After a postdoctoral position in the group of Professor Miles V. Klein at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he joined the Physics faculty of the University of Michigan in 1980. Since 2000, he has held a joint appointment in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Merlin was a Visiting Professor at the Max-Planck-Institut FKF, Stuttgart, Germany (1987), at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (1996), at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France (2007), at the Pulse Institute, Stanford University (2013) and at ETH, Zurich, Switzerland (2014). In 1997, he held the Visiting Professor Iberdrola Chair at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain.
Professor Merlin's primary research specialty is experimental condensed matter physics. His areas of expertise include various continuous wave and ultrafast optical techniques and, in particular, spontaneous, and impulsive (stimulated) Raman spectroscopy. His current interests focus on the generation and control of coherent vibrational and electronic fields using ultrafast laser and x-ray pulses, and metamaterials. Merlin and collaborators pioneered experimental work on Fibonacci superlattices, the quantum-confined Pockels effect and squeezed phonons. Other significant contributions include the earliest light-scattering studies of interface phonons, folded acoustic modes and shallow impurities in GaAs/AlAs heterostructures, and the development of the technique of magneto-Raman scattering.
Professor Merlin has made substantial theoretical contributions to the fields of ultrafast science and metamaterials. In particular, he provided an analytical solution to the almost-perfect lens problem confirming predictions of perfect focusing for a negative-index slab, and revealed the deep connection that exists between modulated patterns of the electromagnetic field and subwavelength focusing; a phenomenon referred to as radiation-less interference. Concerning ultrafast optical science, Merlin was the first to point out the importance of stimulated Raman scattering in the generation of coherent phonon oscillations for excitation above the band gap, and to uncover the existence of two distinct Raman tensors, one associated with the generation and the second one with the detection of the coherent oscillations.
Professor Merlin is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2015), the Optical Society of America (2000), American Physical Society (1996), the von Humboldt Foundation (1987), the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (2007) and the Simons Foundation (2013). Other honors include the 2006 Frank Isakson Prize of the American Physical Society for Optical Effects in Solids, Cooper Lecturer (2015) at the Department of Physics, West Virginia University, the 2017 Ellis R. Lippincott Award (Optica Society, The Coblentz Society and the Society for Applied Spectroscopy), and Lannin Lecturer (2002) at the Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University. His service record includes Chair of the APS Forum on International Physics (1996-1997), Member of the APS Committee on International Freedom of Scientists (2002-2004) and General Chair of the Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference (2006). He was also a member of the Editorial Board of the Springer Series in Solid State Sciences, the journal Solid State Communications, and a Divisional Associate Editor of Physical Review Letters.
Selected Publications
Perturbed Periodic Lattices: Sharp Crossover Between Effective-Mass-Like States and Wannier-Stark-Like Ladders, (R. Merlin), Phys. Rev. B 108, 115128 (2023).
An Exactly Solvable Toy Model of Autocatalysis: Irreversible Relaxation after a Quantum Quench, (R. Merlin), Phys. Rev. E 108, 014104 (2023).
Rabi oscillations, Floquet states, Fermi’s golden rule, and all that: Insights from an exactly solvable two-level model, (R. Merlin), Am. J. Phys. 89, 27 (2021).
Echoes of a Squeezed Oscillator, (R. Merlin and A. Bianchini), Phys. Rev. Res. 3, 013012 (2021).
Intensity correlation speckles as a technique for removing Doppler broadening, (R. Merlin, N. Green, I. Szapudi, and G. Tarle), Phys. Rev. A 103, L041701 (2021).
The Geiger counter and the chair, (R. Merlin), Phys. World 34, 60 (2021).
Symmetry-resolved two-magnon excitations in a strong spin-orbit-coupled bilayer antiferromagnet, (S. Li, E. Drueke, Z. Porter, W. Jin, Z. Lu, D. Smirnov, R. Merlin, S. D. Wilson, K. Sun, and L. Zhao), Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 087202 (2020).
Synchrotron Radiation from an Accelerating Light Pulse, (M. Henstridge, C. Pfeiffer, D. Wang, A. Boltasseva, V. M. Shalaev, A. Grbic and R. Merlin), Science 362, 439 (2018).
Parametric amplification of optical phonons, (A. Cartella, T. F. Nova, M. Fechner, R. Merlin and A. Cavalleri), Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 115, 12148 (2018).
An effective magnetic field from optically driven phonons, (T. F. Nova, A. Cartella, A. Cantaluppi, M. Först, D. Bossini, R. Mikhaylovskiy, A.V. Kimel, R. Merlin and A. Cavalleri), Nature Phys. 13, 132 (2017).
Field(s) of Study
- Condensed Matter Experiment