Our paper, also my very first paper, published in Phys. Rev. Lett.
To be honest, this is a bit of “old news”.
I actually set up this personal website a while ago, but I haven’t written any posts until now. Since this is my first post, I must dedicate it to the coolest thing I have done in my life so far: getting my very first paper published in Physical Review Letters late last year. (And no, that Optics Continuum paper doesn’t count. I think it naturally doesn’t, since it was a weeks-long project started and submitted much later, just to graduate.)
Looking back, I devoted all my energy to that paper. It is the outcome of my entire three years as a master’s student.
I am very grateful to all my teachers, especially my advisor, Prof. Lu. Without his support and encouragement, I could never have done this. He is deeply disciplined and careful in research, yet always brave enough to push forward. This scientific spirit will benefit me for the rest of my life.
I also want to thank the anonymous referees, even though I don’t know who they are. Their comments were thoughtful and genuinely helpful, and made the paper much better.
If you are interested in our paper, you may refer to the general introduction post that I wrote: [We leverage SPADE to exhaust micro-motion information].
If you want to read the full paper, I highly recommend checking out the arXiv version linked below. I personally fine-tuned its layout and style. I promise the main text has only minor stylistic differences from the published version, and the Supplementary Material is fully included.
BTW, why do I have to pay for my own papers? That’s UNFAIR!
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Paper information: Measuring the Oscillation Frequency beyond the Diffraction Limit, Phys. Rev. Lett. 135, 243802 (2025).
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DOI: 10.1103/szcc-vk9r.
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Read the full paper: arXiv:2504.04350.
Comments should be available here…
If it doesn’t work, you can view on GitHub Discussions.