Del Mar Photonics featured customer: Dr Jeremy Bolger
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Bio: Jeremy Bolger received the BSc. Hons. (1st) degree from the University of 
Western Australia in 1982. He worked in applied mining research for Group 
Special Equipment, CRA, Melbourne for two years before moving to the UK to take 
up a British Council Commonwealth Scholarships and Fellowships Plan PhD 
scholarship at Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh. He received his PhD in 1992 
for a comprehensive investigation of ultrafast visible-wavelength nonlinearities 
in wide-gap II-VI semiconductors and in crystalline polymers. 
Subsequent to his PhD studies, Dr. Bolger worked at the Iowa Advanced Technology 
Laboratories, University of Iowa, USA on ultrafast coherent dephasing 
nonlinearities in GaAs multiple-quantum wells (MQWs) at cryogenic temperatures. 
He devised and demonstrated a pioneering experiment in time- and 
polarization-resolved coherent four-wave mixing on 100 fs timescales, which 
demonstrated the influence of biexciton states in the optical properties of MQWs 
at much higher temperatures than previously thought. After working in industrial 
laboratories in defence and mining in Australia for four years Dr. Bolger moved 
into the fibre-optic component development industry in 2000, working for Nortel 
Networks (Photonic) and then JDS Uniphase, where he designed and prototyped 
components used in ultra-high speed long-haul transmission networks, including 
micro-optic circulators and dispersion-compensating gratings. He was responsible 
for the design and demonstration of the world’s smallest optical circulator, 
with length only 27 mm, which was subsequently commercialised to a 
mass-production stage.
He is currently the Laboratory Manager at the new Photonics and Optical Physics 
Laboratory at the University of Sydney (POPLUS), a new facility funded by CUDOS. 
Dr. Bolger is a member of the Optical Society of America.
Jeremy purchased Del Mar Photonics Pismo 
pulse picker with custom specifications.
Additional information on Pismo pulse pickers