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Michelle Simmons

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Name
  
Michelle Simmons


Michelle Simmons 1322083633210jpg

2012 im 70 3 honu age group spotlight with michelle simmons


Michelle Yvonne Simmons is a Scientia Professor of Quantum Physics in the Faculty of Science at the University of New South Wales and has twice been an Australian Research Council Federation Fellow and is now an Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow. She is the Director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation & Communication Technology and is recognised internationally as a pioneer in atomic electronics and Quantum Computing. She is also Editor-in-Chief of npj Quantum Information, an academic journal publishing articles in the emerging field of quantum information science.

Contents

Michelle Simmons Professor Michelle Simmons Leading Australia39s Quantum

Quantum computation michelle simmons tedxsydney


Career

Michelle Simmons wwwabcnetauradionationalimage58055503x2340

In the 1990s Simmons worked as a Research Fellow in Quantum electronics alongside Sir Michael Pepper at the Cavendish Laboratory in the UK where she gained an international reputation for her work in the discovery of the 0.7 feature and the development of 'hole' transistors. In 1999, she was awarded a QEII Fellowship and came to Australia, where she was a founding member of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computer Technology. She made the Australia Day address for NSW in 2017 and spoke about the importance of setting high expectations for students. She made it clear that Australians need to set the bar high and tell their students they expect them to jump over it. She said, "It is better to do the things that have the greatest reward; things that are hard, not easy."

Achievements

Michelle Simmons Big thinking on a small matter Australia Unlimited

Since 2000, Simmons has established a large research group dedicated to the fabrication of Atomic scale devices in silicon and germanium using the atomic precision of scanning tunnelling microscopy. Her research group is the only group worldwide that can create atomically precise devices in silicon—they were also the first team in the world to develop a working "perfect" single-atom transistor and the narrowest conducting doped wires in silicon.

Michelle Simmons Physics professor elected to elite academy School of Physics

Simmons has published over 350 peer-reviewed journal papers amassing over 6,000 citations, written five book chapters and published a book on Nanotechnology. She has also filed four patents and delivered over 100 invited and plenary presentations at international conferences.

She was elected to the Australian Academy of Science in 2006.

Honours

In 2005, Simmons was awarded the Australian Academy of Science Pawsey Medal In 2006, she became one of the youngest researchers to be elected a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science. In 2011, Simmons was named NSW Scientist of the Year by the NSW Government Office of the Chief Scientist. In 2014, she was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2015, Michelle was awarded the Thomas Ranken Lyle Medal, and was the winner of the Eureka Prize for Leadership in Science. She was named the L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards for Women in Science Asia-Pacific Laureate in 2017 and was subsequently profiled in a short documentary on France24 TV.

References

Michelle Simmons Wikipedia


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