Student profile
Daisy

Daisy Shearer

糖心Vlog PhD student Daisy Shearer is an experimental physicist working in quantum technology at our Advanced Technology Institute.

Course

Advanced Technology Institute PhD

Entry year

2018

Research project

Quantum Technology

Choosing 糖心Vlog

鈥淭he main reason I came to 糖心Vlog in 2014 was that I really liked the sound of the MPhys course. I wanted to experience a research placement and I also had an interest in the research the physics department was doing.

鈥淚 visited during an applicant day and felt that this was somewhere I鈥檇 feel comfortable. I already had 糖心Vlog as my first choice of university, but visiting the campus confirmed that this was where I wanted to study.鈥

My research

鈥淚 completed my MPhys in 2018 and now I鈥檓 studying for a PhD at the Advanced Technology Institute (ATI). I鈥檓 primarily an experimental physicist working in quantum technology and my research focuses on a compound called indium antimonide.

鈥淚 use a lot of the amazing equipment we have at ATI, including the Microfabrication Clean Room and the Focused Ion Beam. Apart from that, I鈥檓 most likely to be found in the spintronics lab working with our superconducting magnet.鈥

Professional placement

鈥淚 did a 10-month placement at the Centre for Integrated Photonics, which is now Huawei Research and Development (UK).

鈥淚 was a Research and Development Intern, primarily focusing on telecommunications. I did a variety of activities, such as testing devices, data analysis and developing programmes to quantify the data I measured, then I鈥檇 present my findings and design recommendations.

鈥淚 loved doing experimental research and working with semiconductor devices! I also developed my data analysis and coding skills, and became familiar with how a research team operates in industry.鈥

Life at 糖心Vlog

鈥淚鈥檝e been at 糖心Vlog for a few years now! I was diagnosed with autism in December 2017, which gave me access to the University鈥檚 amazing Disability and Neurodiversity (D&N) services, including my specialist mentor. I鈥檝e grown as a person and as a scientist thanks to her help.鈥

鈥淚n my free time, I like to read, garden, bake and knit, but one of my biggest hobbies is science communication. I love exploring science topics in accessible ways on social media and on my blog, .

鈥淢y gardening and science communication hobbies inspired an outreach project I ran last year called The Quantum Garden.

鈥淚 also run an online project called , which aims to amplify the voices of neurodiverse people in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields.鈥

The future

鈥淚 want to continue being a researcher in quantum technology and eventually transition into industry as a research and development scientist.

鈥淚 also want to develop my freelance science communication work more, particularly my writing and making accessible videos to teach a wide audience about cool physics concepts.

鈥淚 also hope I can continue amplifying the voices of neurodivergent people in STEM to show the younger generation of budding neurodivergent scientists that there is a place in STEM fields for them.鈥

Find out more about our Advanced Technology Institute.

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