Get free YouTube views, likes and subscribers
Get Free YouTube Subscribers, Views and Likes

Anne L’Huillier found it difficult to finish lecture after Nobel Prize in physics win

Follow
AP Archive

(3 Oct 2023)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lund 3 October 2023
1. Exterior of faculty of science building at Lund University
2. Various of auditorium
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne L’Huillier, Noble Prize Winner in Physics:
”I was teaching and my telephone is not on when I teach. But then during the pause, I actually picked up my phone and this is how I heard. But then I wanted to finish my lecture, so I just had it a little bit shorter. And so I asked the student to finish earlier and I think they guessed. But it was fun. It was difficult to do the rest of the lecture."
4. People clapping when L’Huillier enters room
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne L’Huillier, Noble Prize Winner in Physics:
“I think it's a historical fact. I am the fifth, but the last three, including me. It's quite recent. So I think that this bad trend is changing at the moment. There will be more and more women in the future, so I'm very pleased to contribute to be the fifth woman and that there will be more women in physics.”
6. Various of L’Huillier at celebration
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne L’Huillier, Noble Prize Winner in Physics:
“This is a difficult question. I would say I never saw this moment. I just happened to participate to an experiment where we got the new results, unexpected and very interesting. And I and I wanted to continue working on it. And this is what I've been doing for 36 years. But it's never that I thought at that time, of course, I didn't have the insight that this would be so important, but so it arrives later, and by many, many steps though not only by me, of course, but by the whole community.”
8. Various of people standing around talking and drinking, Lund University posters in the back
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne L’Huillier, Noble Prize Winner in Physics:
“I think that this field is going towards application both fundamental still, but maybe it will come to more practical and also some practical application. Practical applications are, I think, towards emerging small structure for the semiconductor industry. So it's really starting there as a metrology tool. But more fundamental is to maybe in chemistry to look at the beginning of chemical reaction, maybe control it. We will see. This is more fundamental, but maybe it will lead to more practical application as well. But it is still a very fundamental field.”
10. L’Huillier taking a picture and holding flowers
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne L’Huillier, Noble Prize Winner in Physics:
“I feel great. I feel like I haven't landed yet. And this is a kind of a shock, emotional shock to get the Nobel Prize in physics. Absolutely great.”
12. Exterior of faculty of science building
STORYLINE:
Noble Prize Winner in Physics Anne L’Huillier said that finishing her lecture on Tuesday after finding out about her win was both "difficult" and "fun".

She is also "pleased" to be the fifth women to win a Noble Prize, and that "there will be more and more women in the future."

"And this is a kind of a shock, emotional shock to get the Nobel Prize in physics. Absolutely great," she added.

Three scientists won the Nobel Prize in physics for giving us the first splitsecond glimpse into the superfast world of spinning electrons, a field that could one day lead to better electronics or disease diagnoses.

The award went to L’Huillier, French scientist Pierre Agostini and Hungarianborn Ferenc Krausz for their work with the tiny part of each atom that races around the centre and that is fundamental to virtually everything: chemistry, physics, our bodies and our gadgets.




Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
Twitter:   / ap_archive  
Facebook:   / aparchives   ​​
Instagram:   / apnews  


You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...

posted by negatorucl