Since the 1960s, Peter Toschek and his associates developed new methods of
laser spectroscopy like Doppler-free saturation spectroscopy as well as the extremely sensitive intra-cavity absorption spectroscopy (ICAS). They observed non-linear interactions of light with atoms like self-induced transparency of an absorber, and like the generation of singular optical oscillations (solitons). In 1978, Toschek‘s research group was the first to demonstrate the cooling of atoms by laser light, just before
David Wineland and co-workers. After Peter Toschek and
Hans Georg Dehmelt having proposed, in 1975, a scheme for the realization and observation of single atomic ions,
Werner Neuhauser,
Martin Hohenstatt and Peter Toschek demonstrated in 1978, for the first time, the trapping and visual observation of a single atom, a Barium ion, which had been cooled by laser light down to a few mK above absolute zero temperature, and confined within a miniature quadrupole
ion trap. This achievement made feasible the manipulation, quantum measurement and spectroscopy of individual atomic ions. On such quantum objects Toschek and associates observed for the first time and reported in 1986 Niels Bohr's metaphorical "quantum jumps", simultaneously with and independent of similar observations by
Hans Georg Dehmelt and co-workers. Other achievements include the first demonstration of a two-photon laser (1981), the quenching of quantum noise (in the difference frequency signal of two laser emission lines) by correlated spontaneous emission (1990), stochastic cooling of single ions (1995), the observation of the oscillation dynamics of trapped ions (1998), atomic interferometry on a single ion (1999) and unambiguous evidence of impeded evolution of an unstable quantum system by the system's observation, the Quantum Zeno effect (2000). Toschek’s former students or associates include
Bernd Appasamy,
Valery Baev,
Rainer Blatt,
Klaus-Jochen Boller,
Philippe Courteille,
Jürgen Eschner,
Theodor Hänsch,
Werner Neuhauser,
Ingo Siemers,
Ingo Steiner, and
Zhang Dao-Zhong. ==Awards==