Supervisors

Negative ions have at most a few bound excited states, usually of the same parity, preventing the use of many traditional spectroscopic methods. Still there are resonances, semi-bound structures embedded in the continuum, which help us investigating them. New experimental possibilitiesm,have now opened the route to look also at core excited resonances and how their decay influence the final charge states.
Prof. Eva Lindroth

Prof. Eva Lindroth

Stockholm University (SU)

Eva Lindroth is a professor of physics at Stockholms University and honorary doctor at Lund University’s Faculty of Engineering. She started her academic career at Gothenburg University and has also worked at the University of Oxford. Her research area is theoretical atomic physics with a focus on many-body theory and calculations, the latter often in close connection to experiments. She is especially interested in resonance structures embedded in the continuum and their role in charge-changing processes, this in connection with electron-ion recombination as well as with photoionization or detachment of negative ions. She is also active in the field of attosecond science.

Prof. Eva Lindroth supervises

  • DC4: Theory for inner-shell photodetachment of atomic anions