Eun-Ah Kim

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eun-Ah Kim (born 1975) is a Korean-American condensed matter physicist interested in high-temperature superconductivity, topological order, strange metals, and the use of neural network based machine learning to recognize patterns in these systems.[1][2] She is a professor of physics at Cornell University.[3]

Education and career[edit]

Kim was born in Jeonju in 1975.[4] She graduated from Seoul National University in 1998 with a bachelor's degree in physics, and earned a master's degree there in 2000. She completed her Ph.D. in 2005 at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[3] Her dissertation, Quantum Hall Tunnel Junctions: Luttinger Liquid Physics, Quantum Coherence Effect and Fractional Quantum Numbers, was supervised by Eduardo Fradkin.[4]

After postdoctoral research at Stanford University, Kim joined the Cornell University faculty in 2008, and was promoted to full professor in 2019.[3]

Recognition[edit]

In 2020, Kim was elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Division of Condensed Matter Physics, "for broad contributions to theoretical condensed matter physics, including new conceptual frameworks for interpreting experiments".[5] In 2022 she was awarded a Simons Fellowship.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gibney, Elizabeth (September 2018), "AI helps unlock dark matter of bizarre superconductors", Nature, 561 (7723): 294–295, Bibcode:2018Natur.561..294G, doi:10.1038/d41586-018-06144-3, PMID 30228325
  2. ^ Sumner, Thomas (23 July 2020), Quantum physicists crack mystery of strange metals, a new state of matter, Simons Foundation, retrieved 2020-11-07
  3. ^ a b c "Eun-Ah Kim", Cornell Physics, retrieved 2020-11-07
  4. ^ a b Kim, Eun-Ah (2005), Quantum Hall Tunnel Junctions: Luttinger Liquid Physics, Quantum Coherence Effect and Fractional Quantum Numbers (Ph.D. dissertation), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Bibcode:2005PhDT.......162K, hdl:2142/34772
  5. ^ APS Fellows Archive: Fellows nominated by DCMP in 2020, retrieved 2020-11-07
  6. ^ "2022 Simons Fellows in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics Announced". Simons Foundation. 18 February 2022. Retrieved 2022-07-04.

External links[edit]