Interviews and Press Releases

2024 - "Women in Research #LINO24: Luana Olivieri", Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting's Blog [link here]

2024 - Physics research fellow attends prestigious Lindau Nobel event, Loughborough University  [link here]

2024 - "10 Questions with Luana Olivieri", Ulrike Boehm's blog Women in Research (womeninresearchblog.wordpress.com) [link here]

2023 - Dr Luana Olivieri recognised in the 2024 Photonics 100 List, Loughborough University [link here]

2023 - Dr Luana Olivieri, one of three researchers at Loughborough University awarded Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship, Loughborough University [link here]

Article's related Press Releases

“Revolutionising terahertz wave manipulation: a leap in imaging and communication technology." (2024) - Loughborough University Media Centre.

As part of the European Union ERC project TIMING, a team, including members of Loughborough’s Emergent Photonics Research Centre in collaboration with Prof Jacopo Bertolotti* from Exeter University, has developed a new technique that enables precise spatiotemporal control of terahertz waves as they pass through disordered materials. 

https://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/physics/news/2024/revolutionizing-terahertz-wave-manipulation/

Scientists demonstrate terahertz wave camera can capture 3D images of microscopic world in major breakthrough” (2023) - Loughborough University Media Centre.

Loughborough University scientists are the first to demonstrate that a terahertz wave camera can capture 3D images of microscopic items hidden inside small objects.


https://www.lboro.ac.uk/media-centre/press-releases/2023/june/scientistsdemonstrateterahertzwavecameracancapture3dimagesofmicroscopicworldinmajorbre/

https://www.lboro.ac.uk/internal/news/2023/june/scientistsdemonstrateterahertzwavecameracancapture3dimagesofmicroscopicworldinmajorbre/

 

Sussex researchers combine lasers, computers & THz waves to build camera that sees ‘unseen’ details” (2020) University of Sussex.


A team of physicists at the University of Sussex has successfully developed the first nonlinear camera capable of capturing high-resolution images of the interior of solid objects using terahertz (THz) radiation.


https://www.sussex.ac.uk/broadcast/read/51331

Media coverage