Béatrice Chatel Explained

Béatrice Chatel
Nationality:French
Alma Mater:Institut d'optique
Occupation:Physicist
Known For:Femtosecond lasers

Béatrice Chatel is a French physicist and researcher specializing in femtosecond lasers. She was awarded an Irène Joliot-Curie Prize in 2005 for her work.

Life and work

In 1993, Chatel graduated from the Institut d'optique Graduate School, sometimes called "SupOptique." She completed her thesis at the Kastler Brossel laboratory and then became a lecturer at the University Toulouse-III-Paul-Sabatier. After a short period at the Applied Optics Laboratory, she began full time research at the Collisions, Aggregates, Reactivity (LCAR) laboratory as a research fellow. Between 2013 and 2014, she was director of the laboratory.

Chatel distinguished herself by developing a laser capable of shaping its pulses in an extremely precise way. Using this tool, researchers can break up molecules in a controlled manner depending on the properties of the laser pulse to which they are subjected.[1]

In addition to her work as a researcher, Chatel was president of the steering committee of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) national network of femtosecond technologies, which seeks to promote exchanges among scientific communities that use these lasers. (A femtosecond laser is a beam of light that is sent in pulses that last about one quadrillionth of a second.) Chatel sometimes visits schools to share stories about her work with young people, "especially young girls." She has also worked as a volunteer at a hospital school where she "contrives to distract sick children with her physics lessons."

Chatel was part of the team that created a travelling optics exhibition that became a part of the World Year of Physics in 2005, the same year she was awarded the Irène Joliot-Curie Prize in the young scientist category.[2]

Selected publications

Distinctions

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2013-01-02 . Fondation d'entreprise EADS, mécène scientifique - Recherche-fondamen… . https://archive.today/20130102141309/http://www.fondation.eads.com/content/fr/Recherche-fondamentale/Prix/Prix-Irene-Joliot-Curie/Archives/Laureats-2005/ . dead . 2013-01-02 . 2022-04-01 . archive.ph.
  2. Web site: CNRS Journal, Béatrice Chatel. A woman of impulse . https://archive.wikiwix.com/cache/index2.php?url=http://pertimm.dsi.cnrs.fr/cgi-bin/ogi_svw.cgi?vd=http://pertimm.dsi.cnrs.fr/viewer&li=aHR0cDovL3BlcnRpbW0uZHNpLmNucnMuZnIvZGF0YS9zaXRlY29tL3d3dzIuY25ycy5mci9qb3VybmFsLzI3MzQuaHRt&fm=TEXT&cp=ansi&no=2&fo=1&lo=true&la=fr&oc=n27938-14-0#federation=archive.wikiwix.com . dead . 2007-06-15 . 2022-03-31 . archive.wikiwix.com . fr.
  3. Web site: CNRS Bronze Medal, 2005 . 2022-03-31 . CNRS.com.
  4. Web site: CNRS - Médailles de bronze- Lauréats 2005 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170725100505/http://www.cnrs.fr/fr/recherche/prix/bronze/2005.htm#federation=archive.wikiwix.com . dead . 2017-07-25 . 2022-03-31 . archive.wikiwix.com .