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  • Urbasi Sinha is a Professor of Light and Matter Physics at the Raman Research Institute, India. Her research is in the field of quantum technologies, where she uses experimental methods to investigate quantum information processing, precision tests of quantum mechanics, photonic quantum computing as well as quantum communications including quantum key distribution (QKD) in free space, fibre and integrated photonics.

    Q&AOpen Access
  • Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta is a Professor and Director at S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, India. Her research focuses on computational condensed matter physics and the study of the optical, electronic, and magnetic properties of materials from first principles. Tanusri has been widely engaged in working groups, meetings, and other activities to promote gender parity in Indian academic institutions.

    Q&AOpen Access
  • Sharona Gordon is a biophysicist, who applies the tools of physics to understand the fundamental principles of life. Her work combines biochemistry, electrophysiology, and fluorescence spectroscopy to understand how chemical signals get converted to electrical signals at cell membranes. She is a full professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

    Q&AOpen Access
  • Flavia de Almeida Dias is an experimental particle physicist who has been a member of the ATLAS Collaboration at the Large Hadron Collider since 2013 and has had leading contributions in analyses involving pairs of vector bosons, searches for extra Higgs bosons and dark-matter mediators. She is an assistant professor at the University of Amsterdam and at Nikhef—the Dutch National Institute for Subatomic Physics. She was previously a postdoctoral research fellow at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and the University of Edinburgh.

    Q&AOpen Access
  • Lyndsay Fletcher is a Professor of Astrophysics, specialising in solar physics, in the School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Glasgow and the Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics, University of Oslo.

    Q&AOpen Access
  • Helen Gleeson is an experimental physicist working in soft matter. She has held leadership positions in both the University of Manchester and the University of Leeds where she is currently the Cavendish Professor of Physics. The focus of her research is in the physics of liquid crystals, both from a fundamental and applied perspective.

    Q&AOpen Access