The Atto-FEL 2022 conference on Attosecond and Free-Electron Laser Science will take place June 27-30 at University College London. The event will take place at the UCL campus located at central London. This is the third edition of the conference, with previous editions being Atto-FEL 2014 and Atto-FEL 2018. Please note that the previous 2 editions were 3-day events while Atto-FEL 2022 will be a 4-day event. The event will take place at Roberts Building, Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre G06. Please note that there will be a poster session and a talk open to the public that will be delivered by Prof. Paul Corkum.
The organizing committee for Atto-FEL 2022 is:
- Chair: Agapi Emmanouilidou
- Paul Corkum
- Eleftherios Goulielmakis
- Boris Bergues
The program of the Atto-FEL 2022 conference can be found here:
Program Atto-FEL 2022
Registration deadline was end of February 2022. The registration fee is 200 pounds. Registration is now closed. The link for registration was :
Abstracts are no longer accepted for Atto-FEL 2022.
Early Career Researchers were particularly encouraged to submit an abstract. From the abstracts submiited, we will select a few abstracts for oral presentation, while the rest will be presented in the poster session. Submission deadline for abstracts was end of February 2022.
Many thanks to our main sponsor the EPSRC funding body, under project EP/W005352/1 and UK AMOR.


The preliminary list of invited speakers is as follows:
Name: | University | Country |
---|---|---|
Paul Corkum | University of Ottawa | Canada |
Mauro Nisoli | Politechnico of Milano | Italy |
Linda Reichl | University of Texas at Austin | USA |
Thomas Pfeifer | Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg | Germany |
Ravi Bhardwaj | University of Ottawa | Canada |
Simon Hooker | University of Oxford | UK |
Nora Berrah | University of Connecticut | USA |
Caterina Vozzi | Institute for Photonics and Nanotechnologies of the NRC | Italy |
Marc Vrakking | Max Born Institute, Berlin | Germany |
Eva Lindroth | Stockholm University | Sweden |
Martin Schultze | Graz University of Technology | Austria |
Thomas Brabec | University of Ottawa | Canada |
Agniesca Jaron | University of Colorado Boulder | USA |
Georgios Katsoulis | University College London | UK |
Olga Smirnova | Max Born Institute | Germany |
Stephen Hogan | University College London | UK |
Dimitris Charalambidis | Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas | Greece |
Itzik Ben-Itzhak | Kansas State University | USA |
Amelle Zair | King's College London | UK |
Hugo Van Der Haart | Queen's University Belfast | UK |
Vinay Majety | Indian Institute of Technology Tirupati | India |
Nimrod Moiseyev | Technion University | Israel |
Lenz Cederbaum | University of Heidelberg | Germany |
Boris Bergues | Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics | Germany |
Eleftherios Goulielmakis | University of Rostock | Germany |
Jan Michael Rost | Max Planck Institute for Complex Systems | Germany |
Gilad Markus | Hebrew University of Jerulasem | Israel |
James Cryan | Stanford University | USA |
Minns Russell | University of Southampton | UK |
Peter Lambropoulos | University of Crete | Greece |
Robert Moshammer | Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics | Germany |
Giles Doumy | Argonne National Laboratory | USA |
Bernd Shuette | Max Born Institute | Germany |