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Robert W. Hellwarth

Photo of Robert W. Hellwarth
Awards & Distinctions

Honorary Member Robert W. Hellwarth was born 10 December 1930 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. Dr. Hellwarth received his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Princeton University in 1952. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, where he obtained his PhD in physics in 1955. He spent a year as a postdoctoral researcher working with Richard Feynman at the California Institute of Technology, followed by positions at Hughes Research Laboratories and Caltech from 1956-1970.  Since then, he has been a professor in the Electrical Engineering and Physics Departments at the University of Southern California, where he remains today.

Hellwarth's research is focused on understanding and developing materials for nonlinear optical devices. His research is particularly concentrated on polymers, suspensions, and photorefractive crystals, physics of optical glasses (especially acoustic attenuation in glass), nonlinear imaging devices, wavefront reversal, and nonlinear optics for systolic-architecture computers.

His work in nonlinear materials has demonstrated the surprisingly low power thresholds for nonlinear effects that may be expected to be found at microwave and longer wavelengths. Hellwarth made the first observation of the hyperfine resonance absorption of a radioactive isotope. He was co-developer of the widely used "precessing-vector" model of two-level atoms. He witnessed the making of the first laser at the Hughes Research Laboratories in 1960, and became an early and continuing contributor to the new optics spawned by this development.

He is perhaps best known for inventing and demonstrating "Q-switching," a contribution that led to the entire field of high-power lasers.  It also led to stimulated Raman scattering, which he was the first to explain.   He was co-discoverer of a new kind of laser action, to which he gave its theoretical basis and the name, "stimulated scattering."

At USC, Professor Hellwarth developed a new, and now widely employed, method for reversing the lightwave pattern of an optical image, a process often called "optical beam phase conjugation." He also invented widely used laser-spectroscopic techniques.

Hellwarth joined OSA in 1982 and was named an OSA Fellow in 1987. He is the recipient of several honors, including the Charles Hard Townes Award, which he won “for his invention of the Q-switched laser, co-discovery of the Raman laser and explanation of stimulated scattering phenomena, and the theory of optical phase conjugation.” He is also a Fellow of the U.S. National Academies of Sciences and Engineering, American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Physical Society and IEEE. 

In 2014, he was named an Honorary Member of the society.

Document Created: 26 Jul 2023
Last Updated: 28 Aug 2023

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