17 Jun 2002
The Optical Society of America has elected an European vice-president for the first time.
Exclusive from PhysicsWeb
Peter Knight of Imperial College in London, UK, beat two other candidates in the election and will serve as vice-president next year, president elect in 2003 and president in 2004. This is Knight's second big appointment in recent months: in August he became head of the physics department at Imperial.
Knight, who is 54 and currently a 'director at large' of the Optical Society of America (OSA), says that he has three main aims for his time in office. First, to make sure the society is fully international in all its activities; second, to ensure that the society's journals remain affordable and maintain their scientific quality; and third to ensure that the society manages the huge success of the Optical Fiber Communication (OFC) conference and exhibit. This show was attended by over 37 000 people last year.
Even though the OSA's headquarters is in Washington, DC, Knight points out that about one third of the society's 14 000 members work outside the United States. The society's premier journal, Optics Letters, currently publishes more papers by European authors than by American authors.
Knight himself has published more than 350 papers on theoretical quantum optics and quantum information and is head of the quantum optics and laser science group at Imperial.
© 2024 SPIE Europe |
|