John D. Joannopoulos
Francis Wright Davis Professor of Physics, Physics (Department of)
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Room 6-C-343
Cambridge, MA 02139
joannop@mit.edu
617.253.4806
Professor John D. Joannopoulos is a principal investigator in the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
He received his B.A. and Ph.D. in Physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1968 and 1974, respectively. He has been on the Faculty of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as Assistant Professor of Physics (1974), Associate Professor of Physics (1978), Professor of Physics (1983) and was awarded the Francis Wright Davis Professor of Physics Chair in 1996. He has served as Divisional Associate Editor of Physical Review Letters, member of the Editorial Board of Reviews of Modern Physics, and was appointed as the Director of the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies at MIT in 2006.
The research of Professor Joannopoulos spans two major directions. The first is devoted to creating a realistic and microscopic theoretical description of the properties of material systems. His approach is fundamental to predicting geometric, electronic and dynamical structure, ab-initio—that is, given only the atomic numbers of the constituent atoms as experimental input. Ab-initio investigations are invaluable because they can stand on their own, complement experimental observations, and probe into regimes inaccessible to experiment. The second major direction involves the development of a new class of materials called photonic crystals, which are designed to affect the properties of photons in much the same way that semiconductors affect the properties of electrons. These materials provide a new dimension in the ability to control and mold the flow of light.
He is the author or coauthor of over 560 refereed scientific journal articles, three textbooks on Photonic Crystals, and holds over 70 issued U.S. Patents. He is also co-founder of 4 startup companies: OmniGuide Inc., Luminus Devices, Inc., WiTricity Corporation and Typhoon HIL, Inc..
Professor Joannopoulos is a Fellow of the American Physical Society (1983) and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2002). He has been an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow (1976–1980) and John S. Guggenheim Fellow (1981–1982). He is the recipient of the Student Council Graduate Teaching Award (1991), the William Buechner Teaching Prize (1996), the David Adler Award of the American Physical Society (1997), and the School of Science Graduate Teaching Award (2002). Since 2003, he has been recognized as one of the Thompson ISI most Highly Cited Researchers. In 2009, Professor Joannopoulos was elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences.
Keywords
semiconductor surface studies, condensed matter physics, photonic crystals and optics, resonant cavities, atomic systems and electronic structure, wet electrons, MITite
Group Websites
Related News Links
01.05.2023
Strengthening electron-triggered light emission
02.24.2022
More sensitive X‑ray imaging
01.16.2018
New exotic phenomena seen in photonic crystals
07.15.2016
Study opens new realms of light-matter interaction
01.11.2016
A nanophotonic comeback for incandescent bulbs?
11.23.2015
A new way to make X‑rays
07.16.2015
Long-sought phenomenon finally detected
03.19.2015
Fujimoto, Hu, and Joannopoulos win prestigious awards from the Optical Society
02.20.2015
Fibers made by transforming materials
12.10.2014
John D. Joannopoulos wins 2015 Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics
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Peekaboo… I see through!
08.06.2013
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12.13.2019
A general theoretical and experimental framework for nanoscale electromagnetism
07.18.2019
Towards integrated tunable all-silicon free-electron light sources
08.09.2018
Diode fibres for fabric-based optical communications
01.02.2017
Efficient plasmonic emission by the quantum Čerenkov effect from hot carriers in graphene
07.15.2016
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11.23.2015
Towards graphene plasmon-based free-electron infrared to X‑ray sources (Nature Photonics)
07.16.2015
Experimental observation of Weyl points (Science)
02.20.2015
Crystalline silicon core fibres from aluminium core preforms (Nature Communications)