Klaus Steiniger

PhD student of Physics at TU Dresden and Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

Personal Info

A site from me, about me, for those who are interested.

On this page you will find some information about topics I had to work on during my studies.
Have fun.

Me during the skiiing holidays

That picture was taken at a nice day during the winterholidays at the end of February 2011. I am on top of the Grasgehren skiing resort near Oberstdorf, Germany.

Current Interests

01 Jan 2013: After finishing my Diploma in June 2012, I finally started my PhD in the same group now. The topic is Radiation processes during laser-matter interaction for the development of novel radiation sources. The focus is now on the application of Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering as a free electron laser.

04 Apr 2011: I started to work for my diploma-thesis in the before mentioned Laser Particle Acceleration Division under supervision of Dr. Michael Bussmann. Title: Elektromagnetische Felder und Elektronendynamik in der Travelling-Wave-Thomsonstreuung (Electromagnetic Fields and Electron Dynamics in Traveling-Wave-Thomson-Scattering)

26 Oct 2010: Now, after my practical training at the Helsinki Institute of Physics I started to work as student assistent in the Laser Particle Acceleration Division at the Hemholtz Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf. There I am studying the possibility to build a Free Electron Laser by crossing an electron beam and a laser pulse in a Traveling-Wave-Thomson-Scattering regime.

17 Jan 2010: I started working with the CMS Software Framework and studying the Bs0→ J/ψ φ → μ+ μ- K+ K- analysis code for the Bs0 and Bs0 reconstruction.

Documents

.Talks and Papers

.Reports from Advanced Experiment Course at TU Dresden

The Advanced Experiment Course is a practical training in several fields of physics during 3rd year of studies. Below are the reports my partner, Alexander Wagner, and I made. All of them are written in German.

In some of the reports could be little mistakes that were us told from the supervisor but we need not to correct.