Lene Hau (born November 13, 1959, Vejle, Denmark) is a Danish physicist who pioneered the use of Bose-Einstein condensates in slowing and stopping light.
From an early age Hau enjoyed mathematics, and she excelled at school, skipping the 10th grade. Her father, who ran a heating business, and her mother, a shop clerk, encouraged her in her scientific pursuits. Hau entered Aarhus University in Aarhus, Denmark, where she was drawn to studying physics because of her interest in mathematics and quantum mechanics. There she earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics (1984), a master’s degree in physics (1986), and a doctorate in physics (1991). Her studies included nine months at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva in 1984–85. In 1989 she accepted a postdoctoral position on the faculty of Harvard University, where in 1999 she became the Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics. Hau also took a position at the Rowland Institute in 1991, serving as principal investigator for the Atom Cooling Group until 1999. Though she resided in the United States, Hau retained her Danish citizenship.
In 1994, working with Jene A. Golovchenko at the Rowland Institute, Hau developed one of the first elements that led to the slowing of light. Called a “candlestick,” the device wicked sodium atoms out of molten sodium metal and projected them into a cooling apparatus that used lasers to cool the atoms to a temperature 50 billionths of a degree above absolute zero. In a 1999 experiment Hau and her colleagues at the Rowland Institute shone lasers through a cloud of ultracold sodium atoms—known as a Bose-Einstein condensate—which effectively slowed light from its normal speed of about 299,792 km (186,282 miles) per second to 61 km (38 miles) per hour.
In 2001 Hau and her team of physicists at the Rowland Institute published a paper in which they described how they had sent a pulse of laser light into a Bose-Einstein condensate, halted the light, stored it for a fraction of a second, and then released it. That year Hau was selected for a five-year MacArthur fellowship. She was named Mallinckrodt Professor of Physics and of Applied Physics at Harvard in 2006. By 2007 she and her team had managed to convert a pulse of light into a matter wave by passing it through a Bose-Einstein condensate and then reconvert it to light by passing it through another Bose-Einstein condensate. It was believed that these advances could translate into practical applications that would substantially improve telecommunications and computers.
Hau was elected to the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences in 2002, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 2008, and the American Academy of Sciences in 2009.