Christian Bordé

Christian Bordé (born 15 March 1943) is a French physicist. He has been a member of the French Academy of Sciences since December 2008.[1]

Biography

Emeritus research director at the CNRS, he is known for his work in the field of ultra-high resolution laser spectroscopy. He invented and developed saturation spectroscopy, which he used to study many new and fundamental effects in molecular physics. Its name is attached to the design of a whole class of atomic interferometers based on the recoil effect, which make it possible to produce optical clocks, measure atomic masses and probe the properties of space-time. In particular, he demonstrated that these interferometers allowed very accurate measurement of the fields of inertia. The proximity of its work to the field of metrology has led it to preside on several occasions, on behalf of the French Academy of Sciences, over the meetings of the General Conference on Weights and Measures, the executive organ of the Metre Convention.

He is a founding member of the French Academy of Technologies[2] and Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.

He is the grandson of engineer and aeronaut Paul-Alphonse-Barthélémy Bordé, inventor of a compass system for airships patented in 1911 and founder of the company of the same name.

gollark: PotatOS lets you split strings with the division operator.
gollark: (I'm going to come up with more eventually)
gollark: ██████ Siri is a dangerous and advanced artificially intelligent system believed to have originated from a project to add an "AI" assistant to Opus OS to help with common tasks. Initial testing versions appeared helpful and were being considered for release, but the project was shut down after its computation began to take up a large amount of server tick time even when not used.
gollark: That's the automatic redaction routines built into the server at work.
gollark: Maybe ██████ Siri has just infected my computer and is *saying* this.

See also

References

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