About


I am a PhD student at the University of Cambridge working on topics from quantum computing and many-body physics. I am also a passionate science communicator. If you are interested in my research work, you can find my CV here.


If you are interested in popular science content, feel free to read on...

What's it all about?

The universe is a strange place. At the smallest scales it's weird, wavy, and uncertain. Particles spread into waves, matter can no longer be observed without changing it, cats can be alive and dead at the same time... At the largest scales, it's dangerous, terrifying and bonkers. Atoms can be the size of planets, invisible matter can make up most of what exists, and there can be regions in outer space where the roles of time and space are interchanged. Meanwhile in the middle, there's life, complexity, and brains.

A while ago these brains decided that it wouldn't be a bad idea to see what the deal is with this whole 'reality' thing. So they tapped the universe on the shoulder and asked it to explain what everything is all about. And the universe, to punish their rude interruption, responded with answers more ridiculous than they ever could have imagined.

And yet all of these answers that brains have collected over the years are swimming around out there, their meaning obscured by jargon and complicated mathematics. Wouldn't it be great if we could do away with all that difficulty, and present these answers simply and all in one place? Say, on a menu that you could peruse at your leisure, from which you could try the daily special or the local delicacy? Might it be possible for some online publication, a blog for example, to collate all of these answers to the big questions of the universe, and present them in an accessible way?

Well maybe not. But we might as well give it a go.

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