Daniel Frank Walls

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Dan Walls
Image:Walls.jpg
Daniel Frank Walls
Born 1942
Napier, New Zealand
Residence New Zealand
Nationality New Zealand
Fields Physicist
Institutions University of Auckland
University of Waikato
Harvard University
Alma mater Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Roy J. Glauber
Doctoral students Gerard J. Milburn
Andrew C. Doherty
Howard J. Carmichael
Peter D. Drummond
Craig M. Savage
Murray J. Holland
Known for Quantum optics
Notable awards Dirac Medal (1995)

Daniel ("Dan") Frank Walls (b. 1942, d. May 12, 1999) was a theoretical physicist specialising in quantum optics.

Dan Walls gained a BSc in physics and mathematics and a first class honours MSc in physics at the University of Auckland. He then went to Harvard as a Fulbright Scholar, obtaining his PhD in 1969, under Roy J. Glauber (who later won a Nobel prize). After holding post-doctoral positions in Auckland and Stuttgart, Walls became a senior lecturer in physics at the University of Waikato in 1972, where he became professor in 1980. In 1987 he moved to the University of Auckland as professor of theoretical physics.

His major research interests centered on the interaction and similarities between light and atoms. He was notable for his wide-ranging expertise in relating theory to experiment, and was involved in all major efforts to understand non-classical light. A seminal paper (J Phys B 9, 1199 (1976)) by Walls with his first graduate student Howard Carmichael, showed how to create antibunched light, in which photons arrive at regular intervals, rather than randomly.

He also was a pioneer in the study of ways that the particle-like nature of light (photons) could be controlled to make optical systems less susceptible to unwanted fluctuations, in particular by the use of squeezed light, a concept formulated by Carlton Caves. In squeezed light, the some fluctuations can be made very small provided other fluctuations are correspondingly large.

Dan Walls was made a Fellow of the Royal Societies of London and New Zealand. His many medals and prizes included the award in 1995 of the Paul Dirac Medal for theoretical physics.

Persondata
NAME Walls, Daniel Frank
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Dan Walls
SHORT DESCRIPTION New Zealand physicist
DATE OF BIRTH 19 September 1942
PLACE OF BIRTH Napier New Zealand
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH Auckland,New Zealand