PLENARY SPEAKERS
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Jennifer Dionne
Stanford University
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Jennifer (Jen) Dionne is a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and, by courtesy, of Radiology at Stanford. She is also a Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator, deputy director of Q-NEXT (a DOE-funded National Quantum Initiative), and co-founder of Pumpkinseed, a company that directly sequences peptides for improved immunotherapies. From 2020-2023, Jen served as Stanford’s Inaugural Vice Provost of Shared Facilities, raising capital modernize instrumentation, fund experiential education, and support new and existing users of the shared facilities. Jen received her B.S. degrees in Physics and Systems Science and Mathematics from Washington University in St. Louis, her Ph. D. in Applied Physics at the California Institute of Technology in 2009, and her postdoctoral training in Chemistry at Berkeley. As a pioneer of nanophotonics, she is passionate about developing methods to observe and control chemical and biological processes as they unfold with nanometer scale resolution, emphasizing critical challenges in global health and sustainability. Her research has developed culture-free methods to detect pathogens and their antibiotic susceptibility; amplification-free methods to detect and sequence nucleic acids and proteins; and new methods to image light-driven chemical reactions with atomic-scale resolution.
Her work has been recognized with the Alan T. Waterman Award, a NIH Director’s New Innovator Award, a Moore Inventor Fellowship, the Materials Research Society Young Investigator Award, and the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, and was featured on Oprah’s list of “50 Things that will make you say ‘Wow’!”. She is especially proud of the many outstanding alumni who have graduated from her lab. Dionne lab members have received awards including HHMI, Beckman, Schmidt and Packard fellowships, and alum now hold faculty positions spanning top academia (eg, professors at MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, Northwestern, among others), industry (Apple, Intel, Facebook/Meta, Lockheed Martin, Pacific Biosciences, Tempus), startups (founders of Antora and Arabesque), policy (Congressional Fellows), and communications (including a Pulitzer prize winner). She also perceives outreach as a critical component of her role and frequently collaborates with visual and performing artists to convey the beauty of science to the broader public. Beyond the lab, Jen enjoys long-distance cycling, trail running, and reliving her childhood with her two young sons.
Manjula Sharma
University of Sydney
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Professor Manjula Sharma completed her early studies at the University of the South Pacific followed by a PhD in physical optics and MEd research methods at The University of Sydney. She is a Professor of Science Education at The University of Sydney, Director of the STEM Teacher Enrichment Academy. Prior to this, she led the Sydney University Physics Education Research (SUPER) group, Science and Mathematics network of Australian University Educators (SaMnet) and Advancing Science and Engineering through Laboratory Learning, ASELL Schools. She is serving as Vice Chair of IUPAP Commission C14 on Physics Education. Professor Sharma co-founded the premier Australian Conference on Science and Mathematics Education (ACSME) and the International Journal of Innovation in Science and Mathematics Education (IJISME).
Sile Nic Chormaic
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology
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Síle Nic Chormaic (Professor) holds a BSc (Hons) in Experimental and Mathematical Physics and an MSc by Research in Atomic Physics from Maynooth University, Ireland. In 1994 she received her PhD on atom interferometry from the Université Sorbonne Paris Nord. Since 2012 she has been at OIST Graduate University, Japan, leading the Light-Matter Interactions for Quantum Technologies Unit. She is recognized for her work on optical nanofibres and other micro- and nanostructured devices for a variety of applications including fundamental studies with cold atoms, microscopic and nanoscopic particle manipulation, and whispering gallery resonators for sensing and nonlinear optics. During her career she has received several awards including an EU Science Bursary, an Austrian Science Foundation Lise Meitner Fellowship, and a Science Foundation Ireland Principal Investigator Award. She is a Fellow of Optica and the Institute of Physics. In her spare time, she walks, runs, or cycles the roads of Okinawa.
David Wiltshire
University of Canterbury
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David Wiltshire is Professor at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch. He obtained his PhD under the supervision of Gary Gibbons in Stephen Hawking’s group at the University of Cambridge, UK, in the mid 1980s. He held research and teaching positions at the ICTP, Trieste, Italy; the University of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, UK; and the University of Adelaide, South Australia, before returning to New Zealand in 2001. He is Fellow and a past President of the New Zealand Institute of Physics, and a past President of the Australasian Society for General Relativity and Gravitation. His research has covered black holes, higher dimensional gravity, observational and theoretical cosmology. Since the mid 2000s his particular focus has been the averaging of the inhomogeneous universe in general relativity, and implications for the problem of dark energy and the foundations of theoretical and observational cosmology. His Timescape cosmology, formulated in 2007, revisits these foundations with falsifiable predictions.
Key May Lau
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Kei May Lau is a Research Professor at the Hong Kong University of Science & Technology (HKUST). She received her degrees from the University of Minnesota and Rice University and served as a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts/Amherst before joining HKUST in year 2000. Lau is an elected member of the US National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of IEEE, Optica (formerly OSA), and the Hong Kong Academy of Engineering Sciences. She was also a recipient of the IPRM award, IET J J Thomson medal for Electronics, Optica Nick Holonyak Jr. Award, IEEE Photonics Society Aron Kressel Award, and Hong Kong Croucher Senior Research Fellowship. She was an Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices and Electron Device Letters, an Associate Editor for the Journal of Crystal Growth and Applied Physics Letters.
Tamara Davis
ARC Center of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery
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Professor Tamara Davis AM has over two decades experience in cosmology with supernovae and large-scale structure. She currently leads the Australian Dark Energy Survey and is Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery, OzGrav. Her accolades include the prestigious Ellery Lectureship from the Astronomical Society of Australia, the Australian Academy of Science’s Nancy Millis Medal for female scientific leadership, and an Order of Australia for “significant service to astrophysical science, to education, and to young astronomers”. She is an avid communicator of science and occasional guest host of ABC TV’s “Catalyst”, including the episode “Black Hole Hunters” which won the American Institute of Physics Science Communication Award. When not doing physics she loves sport and has captained Australia in Ultimate frisbee.
Nicolas Regnault
Princeton University
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Nicolas Regnault is a CNRS research director at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris and a visiting researcher at Princeton University. He did his PhD thesis on integrable models for gravity and then moved to condensed matter. He is a renowned expert in the fractional quantum Hall physics, especially its numerical aspects, topological phases of matter, entanglement properties in many-body quantum states and out-of-equilibrium quantum systems.
Elisabetta Barberio
The University of Melbourne
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Elisabetta Barberio was born in a mountainous region of Calabria, Italy, and grew up in a village on the La Sila mountainous plateau.
Her studies took her round the world, completing her Laurea (the Italian version of the Bachelor’s degree) in Bologna, her PhD in Germany, and a Koshland fellowship at the Wizmann Institute in Israel.
Before undertaking a role at The University of Melbourne in 2004, Professor Barberio played an important role in the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs Boson particle at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics.
At CERN, she performed measurements that confirmed the theory describing fundamental particles’ behaviour to an extraordinary degree of precision.
In 2018 Professor Barberio was the first woman to be awarded the prestigious Walter Boas Medal of the Australian Physical Institute.
She has continued to be a trailblazer in the field of physics, initiating the first direct detection dark matter program in Australia and the construction of the first underground laboratory in the Southern Hemisphere, the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory.
She is also at the helm of the SABRE South experiment – Australia’s first dark matter direct detection experiment that aims to solve one of the great mysteries of the universe – the nature of dark matter.
As Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Dark Matter Particle Physics, Professor Barberio leads a team of dark matter researchers from The University of Melbourne, The University of Adelaide, Swinburne University of Technology, Australian National University, The University of Sydney and The University of Western Australia, alongside national and international partners.
In this position, she is committed to nurturing a more diverse and inclusive scientific community of the future and bringing the joy and excitement of science to communities across Australia.
The SABRE South experiment
Professor Barberio is leading is the SABRE (Sodum Iodide with Active Background Rejection Experiment) South experiment.
This is Australia’s first major dark matter direct detection experiment and comprises a huge steel vessel encasing some of the world’s most pure crystals, which are being specially-made for the project.
It will be located 1km underground in the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory in Stawell Gold Mines. Its location aims to reduce interference from cosmic radiation.
The experiment mirrors the SABRE experiment at Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy, which has been taking data for almost 30 years.
The Australian experiment will help researchers determine the impact of seasonal modulation on potential dark matter signals to confirm or refute the results of the SABRE project in the Northern Hemisphere.
The experiment, helmed by Professor Barberio, is expected to start taking data by the end of the year.
More information on the SABRE South experiment is available at: https://www.sabre-experiment.org.au/
Ivan Deustch
The University of New Mexico
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Ivan Deutsch is Distinguished Professor & Regents Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of New Mexico. He received his undergraduate degree in physics at MIT and his physics PhD at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the Founding Director of the newly established Quantum New Mexico Institute (QNM-I), a joint institute between the University of New Mexico, Sandia National Laboratories, and Los Alamos National Laboratory in quantum information science and engineering. His expertise is in theoretical atomic molecular and optical physics and quantum information science. He has made contributions to the theory of quantum control and measurement, open quantum systems, and quantum chaos. He has co-authored other 110 peer review articles and has been the mentor to over 25 PhD students.
Georgi Dvali
Max Planck Institute for Physics
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Gia Dvali is a distinguished physicist with a focus on particle physics, gravity, and cosmology. He earned his diploma in 1985 and a PhD in 1992 from Tbilisi State University and the Institute of Physics in Tbilisi. Following his doctoral studies, he completed postdoctoral research at ICTP in Trieste and INFN in Pisa, and later served as a paid scientific associate at CERN in Geneva. Dr. Dvali became a faculty member at ICTP in 1997 and went on to serve as a professor at New York University from 1998 to 2019.
During this time, he also held senior roles at CERN, where he was a senior staff member from 2007 to 2012. Since 2009, he has been the Director of the Max Planck Institute for Physics and, since 2010, a professor and chair at Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. His accolades include recognition as a Sloan Fellow, Packard Fellow, recipient of the New York City Mayor Award, Silver Professorship at NYU (an endowed chair), Humboldt Professorship, and Lorentz Professorship.
Naomi Halas
Rice University
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Naomi J. Halas is a University Professor and the Stanley C. Moore Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rice University. She is known for her pioneering work in nanophotonics and plasmonics. Halas is best known for showing that the nanoscale internal and external morphology of noble metal nanoparticles control their optical properties. Her work merged chemical nanofabrication with optics, giving rise to the field of Plasmonics. She pursues fundamental studies of light-nanoparticle interactions as well as applications of plasmonics in biomedicine, optoelectronics, chemical sensing, photocatalysis, and solar water treatment. She is a member of the U. S. National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, and the Royal Society of Chemistry (UK).
Joanne Etheridge
Monash University
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Joanne Etheridge is currently the Australian Research Council Georgina Sweet Laureate Fellow in the School of Physics and Astronomy at Monash University and the Science Director of the Monash Centre for Electron Microscopy. She obtained a degree and PhD in physics from the University of Melbourne and RMIT University, respectively, before appointments at the University of Cambridge in the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy and Newnham College, including a Rosalind Franklin Research Fellowship and a Royal Society University Research Fellowship. She returned to Melbourne to join Monash University where she established the Monash Centre for Electron Microscopy and held an academic position in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. She conducts research in the theory and development of new electron scattering methods for determining the atomic and electronic structure of condensed matter. She also applies these methods to the study of structure-property relationships in functional materials. She is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science.
Michael Tobar
University of Western Australia
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EQUS Chief Investigator Professor Michael Tobar has concluded his term as the IEEE UFFC Distinguished Lecturer in December 2023, with a final lecture at ETH Zürich. Originally supposed to run from July 2021 to December 2022, Mike’s term was extended as a result of the pandemic, with the first lecture delivered at the University of Tasmania in December 2021.
In total, Mike delivered 30 lectures around the world, across Australia, Asia, Europe, the UK and the US, under the title ‘Precision Metrology with Photons, Phonons and Spins: Answering Major Unsolved Problems in Physics and Advancing Translational Science’.
His lectures promoted international collaboration and cooperation in the discipline of precision frequency metrology, quantum measurement and its relation to detecting fundamental physics. While pursuing some of the best tests of fundamental physics to search for dark matter and gravitational waves, and to investigate quantum gravity and the mystery of time, he also showed how such quests leads to major advances in technology, such as precision oscillators and clocks for radar and telecommunications, gravitational gradient detection and a new range of quantum sensors for a broad range of disruptive technologies.
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