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Sven Burger

Researcher at Zuse Institute Berlin

Publications -  362
Citations -  8902

Sven Burger is an academic researcher from Zuse Institute Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Finite element method & Photonic crystal. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 337 publications receiving 7902 citations. Previous affiliations of Sven Burger include German National Metrology Institute & European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy.

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Dark solitons in bose-einstein condensates

TL;DR: In this paper, a phase imprinting method was used to create dark solitons in cigar-shaped Bose-Einstein condensates of ∆{87, ∆, rb{Rb}.
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Magnetic Metamaterials at Telecommunication and Visible Frequencies

TL;DR: This work identifies a novel higher-order magnetic resonance at around 370 THz (800 nm wavelength) that evolves out of the Mie resonance for oblique incidence and shows that the structures allow for a negative magnetic permeability.
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Josephson junction arrays with Bose-Einstein condensates.

TL;DR: This report reports on the direct observation of an oscillating atomic current in a one-dimensional array of Josephson junctions realized with an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate, which may allow investigation of phenomena so far inaccessible to superconducting Josephsonjunctions and lays a bridge between the condensates dynamics and the physics of discrete nonlinear media.
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Highly indistinguishable photons from deterministic quantum-dot microlenses utilizing three-dimensional in situ electron-beam lithography

TL;DR: This work combines cathodoluminescence spectroscopy with advanced in situ three-dimensional electron-beam lithography at cryogenic temperatures to pattern monolithic microlenses precisely aligned to pre-selected single quantum dots above a distributed Bragg reflector to enhance the photon-extraction efficiency.
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Photonic Metamaterials: Magnetism at Optical Frequencies

TL;DR: The negative index metamaterial (NIM) as mentioned in this paper is a class of materials with lattice constants smaller than the wavelength of light that can be tailored to the properties of their functional building blocks (atoms).