About me

I am a scientist who builds tools and develops techniques to study matter at its natural time and length scales. I work with ultrafast laser and electron microscopes to understand and manipulate matter on the level of femtoseconds and nanometers.

I am currently a scientist in the Laboratory of Ultrafast Microscopy and Electron Scattering at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland. I hold an FP-RESOMUS Postdoctoral Fellowship from NCCR-MUST and the European Research Council. I work on ultrafast electron microscopy and diffraction, attosecond electron pulse generation and electron interactions with microphotonic resonators.

Before joining EPFL I did my PhD in the Laser Consortium section of the Quantum Optics and Laser Science group at Imperial College London. There I worked on attosecond pulse generation with synthesized laser fields and attosecond streaking spectroscopy. During my PhD I also spent time at the iFAST, part of the University of Central Florida, working on high-power mid-infrared ultrafast lasers.

I did my integrated master's degree at Imperial College London. My project was also in the Laser Consortium, where I worked on new measurement techniques for ultrashort laser pulses. 



Questions? Want to collaborate? Email me at bruce.weaver@epfl.ch or connect on Linkedin!