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Reçu aujourd’hui — 16 juillet 20256.5 📰 Sciences English

Solestial wins $1.2 million SpaceWERX contract

16 juillet 2025 à 14:49

SAN FRANCISCO – Solar energy startup Solestial won a $1.2 million Space Force contract to develop novel arrays for small satellites. Under a SpaceWerx award announced July 16, Solestial will optimize silicon solar cells and power modules for speedy integration and assembly. In addition, Solestial will develop electrical interconnectors. The project will culminate in Solestial […]

The post Solestial wins $1.2 million SpaceWERX contract appeared first on SpaceNews.

Protestors rally behind NASA in the face of budget cuts and layoffs

16 juillet 2025 à 13:00
NASA Acting Administrator Janet Petro speaking at the 40th Space Symposium April 8. Credit: Tom Kimmell Photography

It’s rare for protestors to show up outside NASA headquarters in Washington — and even rarer when they include a Pokémon character. But on the morning of June 30, about 60 people gathered on the corner of 4th and E Streets SW, waving signs and shouting through a bullhorn, seeking to attract the attention of […]

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How to keep the second law of thermodynamics from limiting clock precision

16 juillet 2025 à 10:00

The second law of thermodynamics demands that if we want to make a clock more precise – thereby reducing the disorder, or entropy, in the system – we must add energy to it. Any increase in energy, however, necessarily increases the amount of waste heat the clock dissipates to its surroundings. Hence, the more precise the clock, the more the entropy of the universe increases – and the tighter the ultimate limits on the clock’s precision become.

This constraint might sound unavoidable – but is it? According to physicists at TU Wien in Austria, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and the University of Malta, it is in fact possible to turn this seemingly inevitable consequence on its head for certain carefully designed quantum systems. The result: an exponential increase in clock accuracy without a corresponding increase in energy.

Solving a timekeeping conundrum

Accurate timekeeping is of great practical importance in areas ranging from navigation to communication and computation. Recent technological advancements have brought clocks to astonishing levels of precision. However, theorist Florian Meier of TU Wien notes that these gains have come at a cost.

“It turns out that the more precisely one wants to keep time, the more energy the clock requires to run to suppress thermal noise and other fluctuations that negatively affect the clock,” says Meier, who co-led the new study with his TU Wien colleague Marcus Huber and a Chalmers experimentalist, Simone Gasparinetti. “In many classical examples, the clock’s precision is linearly related to the energy the clock dissipates, meaning a clock twice as accurate would produce twice the (entropy) dissipation.”

Clock’s precision can grow exponentially faster than the entropy

The key to circumventing this constraint, Meier continues, lies in one of the knottiest aspects of quantum theory: the role of observation. For a clock to tell the time, he explains, its ticks must be continually observed. It is this observation process that causes the increase in entropy. Logically, therefore, making fewer observations ought to reduce the degree of increase – and that’s exactly what the team showed.

“In our new work, we found that with quantum systems, if designed in the right way, this dissipation can be circumvented, ultimately allowing exponentially higher clock precision with the same dissipation,” Meier says. “We developed a model that, instead of using a classical clock hand to show the time, makes use of a quantum particle coherently travelling around a ring structure without being observed. Only once it completes a full revolution around the ring is the particle measured, creating an observable ‘tick’ of the clock.”

The clock’s precision can thus be improved by letting the particle travel through a longer ring, Meier adds. “This would not create more entropy because the particle is still only measured once every cycle,” he tells Physics World. “The mathematics here is of course much more involved, but what emerges is that, in the quantum case, the clock’s precision can grow exponentially faster than the entropy. In the classical analogue, in contrast, this relationship is linear.”

“Within reach of our technology”

Although such a clock has not yet been realized in the laboratory, Gasparinetti says it could be made by arranging many superconducting quantum bits in a line.

“My group is an experimental group that studies superconducting circuits, and we have been working towards implementing autonomous quantum clocks in our platform,” he says. “We have expertise in all the building blocks that are needed to build the type of clock proposed in in this work: generating quasithermal fields in microwave waveguides and coupling them to superconducting qubits; detecting single microwave photons (the clock ‘ticks’); and building arrays of superconducting resonators that could be used to form the ‘ring’ that gives the proposed clock its exponential boost.”

While Gasparinetti acknowledges that demonstrating this advantage experimentally will be a challenge, he isn’t daunted. “We believe it is within reach of our technology,” he says.

Solving a future problem

At present, dissipation is not the main limiting factor for when it comes to the performance of state-of-the-art clocks. As clock technology continues to advance, however, Meier says we are approaching a point where dissipation could become more significant. “A useful analogy here is in classical computing,” he explains. “For many years, heat dissipation was considered negligible, but in today’s data centres that process vast amounts of information, dissipation has become a major practical concern.

“In a similar way, we anticipate that for certain applications of high-precision clocks, dissipation will eventually impose limits,” he adds. “Our clock highlights some fundamental physical principles that can help minimize such dissipation when that time comes.”

The clock design is detailed in Nature Physics.

The post How to keep the second law of thermodynamics from limiting clock precision appeared first on Physics World.

Reçu hier — 15 juillet 20256.5 📰 Sciences English

Frontgrade Introduces the Industry’s Highest-Density, Space-Grade Managed NAND with eMMC 5.1 Interface

15 juillet 2025 à 19:09
Frontgrade logo

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – July 15, 2025 – Pushing the boundaries of in-orbit data storage, Frontgrade Technologies, the leading provider of high-reliability microelectronics for space and national security, has unveiled […]

The post Frontgrade Introduces the Industry’s Highest-Density, Space-Grade Managed NAND with eMMC 5.1 Interface appeared first on SpaceNews.

Spacecraft can navigate using light from just two stars

15 juillet 2025 à 18:03

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft has been used to demonstrate simple interstellar navigation by measuring the parallax of just two stars. An international team was able to determine the location and heading of the spacecraft using observations made from space and the Earth.

Developed by an international team of researchers, the technique could one day be used by other spacecraft exploring the outermost regions of the solar system or even provide navigation for the first truly interstellar missions.

New Horizons visited the Pluto system in 2015 and has now passed through the Kuiper Belt in the outermost solar system.

Now, NOIRLab‘s Tod Lauer and colleagues have created a navigation technique for the spacecraft by choosing two of the nearest stars for parallax measurements. These are Proxima Centauri, which is just 4.2 light–years away, and Wolf 359 at 7.9 light–years. On 23 April 2020, New Horizons imaged star-fields containing the two stars, while on Earth astronomers did the same.

At that time, New Horizons was 47.1 AU (seven billion kilometres) from Earth, as measured by NASA’s Deep Space Network. The intention was to replicate that distance determination using parallax.

Difficult measurement

The 47.1 AU separation between Earth and New Horizons meant that each vantage point observed Proxima and Wolf 359 in a slightly different position relative to the background stars. This displacement is the parallax angle, which the observations showed to be 32.4 arcseconds for Proxima and 15.7 arcseconds for Wolf 359 at the time of measurement.

By applying simple trigonometry using the parallax angle and the known distance to the stars, it should be relatively straightforward to triangulate New Horizons’ position. In practice, however, the team struggled to make it work. It was the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and finding observatories that were still open and could perform the observations on the required night was not easy.

Edward Gomez, of the UK’s Cardiff University and the international Las Cumbres Observatory, recalls the efforts made to get the observations. “Tod Lauer contacted me saying that these two observations were going to be made, and was there any possibility that I could take them with the Las Cumbres telescope network?” he tells Physics World.

In the end, Gomez was able to image Proxima with Las Cumbres’ telescope at Siding Spring in Australia. Meanwhile, Wolf 359 was observed by the University of Louisville’s Manner Telescope at Mount Lemmon Observatory in Arizona. At the same time, New Horizons’ Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) took pictures of both stars, and all three observations were analysed using a 3D model of the stellar neighbourhood based on data from the European Space Agency’s star-measuring Gaia mission.

The project was more a proof-of-concept than an accurate determination of New Horizons’ position and heading, with the team describing the measurements as “educational”.

“The reason why we call it an educational measurement is because we don’t have a high degree of, first, precision, and secondly, reproducibility, because we’ve got a small number of measurements, and they weren’t amazingly precise,” says Gomez. “But they still demonstrate the parallax effect really nicely.”

New Horizons position was calculated to within 0.27 AU, which is not especially useful for navigating towards a trans-Neptunian object. The measurements were also able to ascertain New Horizon’s heading to an accuracy of 0.4°, relative to the precise value derived from Deep Space Network signals.

Just two stars

But the fact that only two stars were needed is significant, explains Gomez. “The good thing about this method is just having two close stars as our reference stars. The handed-down wisdom normally is that you need loads and loads [of stars], but actually you just need two and that’s enough to triangulate your position.”

There are more accurate ways to navigate, such as pulsar measurements, but these require more complex and larger instrumentation on a spacecraft – not just an optical telescope and a camera. While pulsar navigation has been demonstrated on the International Space Station in low-Earth orbit, this is the first time that any method of interstellar navigation has been demonstrated for a much more distant spacecraft.

Today, more than five years after the parallax observations, New Horizons is still speeding out of the solar system. It has cleared the Kuiper Belt and today is 61 AU from Earth.

When asked if the parallax measurements will be made again under better circumstances Gomez replied. “I hope so. Now that we’ve written a paper in The Astronomical Journal that’s getting some interest, hopefully we can reproduce it, but nothing has been planned so far.”

In a way, the parallax measurements have brought Gomez full-circle. “When I was doing [high school] mathematics more years ago than I care to remember, I was a massive Star Trek fan and I did a three-dimensional interstellar navigation system as my mathematics project!”

Now here he is, as part of a team using the stars to guide our own would-be interstellar emissary.

 

The post Spacecraft can navigate using light from just two stars appeared first on Physics World.

Open letter from the Global Space Council: Governments must address a growing crisis in our orbits

15 juillet 2025 à 15:00
A visualization of active and inactive satellites, discarded rocket bodies, orbital debris and other space objects around Earth, showing an increasingly cluttered and hazardous Earth orbit. Credit: AstriaGraph by the University of Texas at Austin.

The space domain is changing faster than most realize. We are at the dawn of a new space economy — one that presents significant opportunities for people around the world. But that promise is today at serious risk. That is why we — as space leaders, experts, astronauts and former policymakers — have formed the […]

The post Open letter from the Global Space Council: Governments must address a growing crisis in our orbits appeared first on SpaceNews.

The rise of women in quantum science in India and the legacy of Satyendra Nath Bose

15 juillet 2025 à 12:00
Women in quantum physics illustration
(Courtesy: Alison Tovey, IOP Publishing)

The 1920s was an era of transformation. In the US, the “Roaring Twenties” saw industrial growth, the rise of consumerism, and huge social change, marked by jazz music, prohibition and flapper fashion. Europe, meanwhile, was recovering from the devastating First World War, and experiencing political and economic instability alongside flourishing artistic and intellectual movements. And India – which was still under British rule at the time – was embracing Mahatma Gandhi’s policy of non-violence and civil disobedience, accelerating its nationalistic movement towards independence.

Amid worldwide cultural and sociopolitical change, another revolution was unfolding in science, particularly in our understanding of physical phenomena that cannot be explained by the classical laws of physics. Intense efforts were being made by European scientists to reconcile puzzling observations, and ground-breaking ideas were being introduced – such as Max Planck’s hypothesis of “quanta” and Albert Einstein’s quantization of electromagnetism. The first quantum revolution was flourishing.

In the midst of this excitement, a modest man from Bengal in undivided India, Satyendra Nath Bose, was teaching physics at Dacca (now Dhaka) University.  He was greatly inspired by the new ideas in physics, and set about trying to solve the big inconsistency with the Plank distribution of black body radiation – the fact that it mixed classical and quantum concepts. Bose introduced the ground-breaking notion of indistinguishability of particles into the evolving quantum theory to rectify the problem, culminating in an equation describing the distribution of energy in the radiation from a black body purely based on quantum physics.

Satyendra Nath Bose
Legacy lives on Satyendra Nath Bose in London, 1925. (Photographer unknown)

Bose’s derivation of Planck’s law impressed Einstein, who had also been trying to solve the problem. He translated the work and submitted it to Zeitschrift für Physik journal on Bose’s behalf. Bose’s novel quantum statistical approach later became known as Bose–Einstein statistics. Einstein followed up with its extension to atoms and the prediction of Bose–Einstein condensates. Bose’s work was a breakthrough for quantum mechanics, and there have since been many discoveries and multiple Nobel prizes awarded for work related to his research. He also laid the foundation for novel technologies that are central to today’s “second quantum revolution”. This exciting era encompasses themes such as quantum computing, communications, sensing and metrology, and materials and devices. Bose’s scientific breakthroughs were not his only contributions to physics at the time.

Competent and capable

Bose lived in an era when women were not welcome in the scientific community in India, as was the case in much of the rest of the world. Infamously, in 1933 biochemist Kamala Sohonie – who went on to be the first Indian woman to get a PhD in a scientific discipline – was denied admission to the Indian Institute of Science by the then-director Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman. Best known for his work on light scattering, Raman believed that women were not competent enough to do scientific research. While Sohonie eventually did get a place, she had to fight hard for it, and Raman enforced certain restrictions. For example, she was on probation for a year and Raman had to approve her work before it could be officially recognized.

Bose on the other hand, did not make any distinction between men and women as far as scientific ability was concerned. In 1951 he welcomed PhD student Purnima Sinha to his group at the University of Calcutta. Despite being the only woman in the team, Sinha succeeded in leaving her indelible imprint on a male-dominated world, helped by the constant guidance and encouragement she received from Bose.

Sinha’s research was on crystallographic and thermal analysis of clay samples taken from all over India. She built sophisticated X-ray instruments using military scrap equipment sold on the streets of Calcutta (now Kolkata) after the Second World War. In 1956 Sinha was awarded her doctorate, becoming the first woman to earn a PhD in physics from Calcutta University (and likely the first woman to get a PhD in physics from an institution in India).

She went on to conduct research in biophysics at Stanford University in the US, and found similarities between clay structure and DNA structure, providing pioneering thoughts on the origin of life. Sinha further broke gender stereotypes by doing masonry work, carpentry and even playing the tabla (a pair of hand drums). Bose was equally supportive of Asima Chatterjee, who started her research on medicinal plant extracts with Bose, and conducted the first small-molecule X-ray diffraction, which was ground-breaking work.

Leading lights

Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta and Rupamanjari Ghosh
Quantum women Authors of this article, Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta (left) and Rupamanjari Ghosh. (Photos kindly supplied by their subjects)

Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta

Director and senior professor at S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta (co-author of this article) uses computational tools to predict and understand novel quantum systems. A recent objective of her research has been to study extreme sensitivity and colossal response of strongly correlated quantum materials to external perturbations to develop them as quantum sensors. Her research aims to find new quantum information platforms – including detectors and qubits – based on correlated multipolar materials as well as developing novel quantum sensor platforms.

Saha-Dasgupta has been fascinated by scientific research since childhood. Her father was a doctoral researcher in physics when she started school, and she was determined to be a scientist too. She studied physics at Presidency College in Kolkata for her bachelor’s degree. In a class of 22 students, there were only four women, and coming from an all-girls school, it was a challenge to cope in the male-dominated environment. However, her passion for science helped her succeed. Saha-Dasgupta ranked first in her master’s at the University of Calcutta, and carried out her PhD work at the S N Bose Centre affiliated to University of Calcutta.

Following her studies, she did postdocs at the aerospace lab ONERA in Paris, France, and later at the Max Planck Institute in Stuttgart, Germany. Studying abroad was not easy for Saha-Dasgupta, as it was filled with hurdles, including serious illness and being separated from her husband. However, her persistence paid off.

Saha-Dasgupta became the first female director at the S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences in 2021. She is a fellow of the American Physical Society and the World Academy of Sciences, as well as all three science academies in India. As a senior professor, she has played a pivotal role in mentoring many students, and has been in a leadership position for several national and international decision-making bodies.

Rupamanjari Ghosh

Rupamanjari Ghosh (co-author of this article) has held multiple prominent positions during her career. She was a professor of physics and dean of the School of Physical Sciences at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi, before moving to Shiv Nadar University (SNU), a new, privately funded research university in the Delhi region. Here she was director of the School of Natural Sciences, and then vice-chancellor of the university. Under her leadership, SNU received the title of “Institution of Eminence” from the government of India within just a few years of its existence.

Born and raised in Kolkata, Ghosh did her undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of Calcutta. Chosen for “outstanding scholarly ability and the promise of exceptional contributions to scholarship and teaching” she was awarded a Rush Rhees fellowship for her PhD studies at the University of Rochester, New York, in the US, where she was the only female PhD student to graduate under Leonard Mandel.

Ghosh is credited with the discovery of a new source of entangled photons using spontaneous parametric down-conversion, and the first experimental demonstration of two-photon interference exhibiting nonlocality. Her group at JNU has worked extensively on the critical issue of decoherence from a quantum to a classical state in specific models. She also has an international collaboration that explores the process of electromagnetically induced transparency – which is a promising approach for implementing quantum memory.

While science and technology are deeply intertwined, Ghosh emphasizes the importance of inventions in science, often arising from singular, deep ideas, that define the “what” of a problem. She is also a big advocate for equality in physics.

Ghosh continues to mentor the next generation of researchers as a governing or advisory council member at several institutions in India. She has also been extensively involved as an expert with the National Quantum Mission (NQM) of the government of India. Furthermore, she is currently the first and only international member on the advisory board of the Executive Leadership Academy at the University of California, Berkeley, US.

Breaking through

While times have changed and women today have more freedom to pursue science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), these areas continue to be dominated by men. India produces the highest percentage of female STEM graduates in the world (43%), but women make up only 14% of the STEM workforce in the country and 18.6% of those directly involved in research and development activities.

The representation of women in the science and technology sector remains strikingly low, both in terms of job applicants and leadership roles. For example, a survey by the Council of Scientific Industrial Research (CSIR) in 2022 revealed that no woman had held the role of director general of CSIR until August of that year when chemical engineer Nallathamby Kalaiselvi became the first woman to lead the institute – a role that she still holds. Indeed, only five of the 35 CSIR labs were led by women at the time of the survey.

Gender bias and traditional role segregation are some of the key reasons why women remain under-represented in STEM careers in India. Several studies have found that women leave the workforce at key phases in their life – notably when they have children – and are also often rejected when seeking jobs because of gender discrimination.

However, the picture is changing rapidly, aided by educational initiatives and grassroots movements advocating for gender equity. The quickly growing quantum sector is no different, and the need for quantum education is greater than ever, as a shortage of trained researchers is being felt globally.

One person hoping to inspire and educate women and girls about quantum computing is Nithyasri Srivathsan – a student at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, who founded SheQuantum in 2020. The start-up company has built an e-learning platform offering lectures, quantum computing courses and other educational resources, as well as articles and interviews with experts. It was listed by The Quantum Insider as one of the “9 Educational Platforms to get the Quantum Workforce Up & Running“, alongside IBM, Microsoft and MIT xPRO among others.

Another example is Women for Quantum (W4Q), which was set up by a group of female physics professors, mostly based in Europe and Japan, who work in the field of quantum optics, quantum many-body physics and quantum information. In its manifesto, the initiative highlights the “unsatisfactory current situation of women in quantum physics” and calls for a joint effort to make real change in the field.

The tradition continues

Two Indian women
Successful succession Swastika Chatterjee (left) and Joyee Ghosh are former students of this article’s authors, continuing the tradition begun by Satyendra Nath Bose of welcoming women into quantum physics. (Photos kindly supplied by their subjects)

The tradition of succession from guru to disciple set up by Satyendra Nath Bose continues. The students of Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta and Rupamanjari Ghosh (see box above) inspired by their passion have now made their mark as established researchers.

Swastika Chatterjee

Swastika Chatterjee is an associate professor at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research in Kolkata. Her research focuses on understanding quantum effects in Earth phenomena, such as the planet’s magnetism and dynamo motion.

Chatterjee completed her undergraduate degree in physics with chemistry and maths at the University of Delhi, before specializing in condensed-matter physics for her master’s. She went on to do her PhD under Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta at the S N Bose National Centre for Basic Science. Chatterjee got married during her studies, and she submitted her thesis while expecting her child. Her daughter was born just a few days later, and trying to balance motherhood and her career posed a significant challenge, but she succeeded through perseverance and determination. “The workplace environment has evolved significantly over the last decade, thanks to our academic predecessors who fought their way out,” she says.

Joyee Ghosh

An associate professor of physics at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, Joyee Ghosh is working to understand photon–atom interactions at the single-particle level, to be used in quantum networks. Her team’s research involves “trusted-node-free” secure quantum communication, based on free-space and fibre-based entangled photon sources.

Ghosh grew up in Kolkata and then got her master’s and PhD degrees from Jawaharlal Nehru University  (JNU), under the supervision of Rupamanjari Ghosh. She went on to do postdoctoral research in Spain as a Marie Curie fellow, and in Germany as an Alexander von Humboldt fellow.

“My journey so far underscores the tenacity and positivity required by women physicists in India to navigate systemic challenges, secure funding and gain recognition in a complex and competitive scientific landscape,” says Ghosh. “I have been fortunate to learn from great teachers and work in some of the best experimental research facilities.”

Celebrating success

The good news is that such efforts seem to be paying off. According to the latest All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) (2020–2021) women make up 42.3% of undergraduate, postgraduate, MPhil, and PhD places in STEM education. There has also been a surge in women in all fields of STEM, including quantum science, where they are making significant contributions to the second quantum revolution.

To celebrate the growing presence of women at the forefront of quantum science in India, the S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences in Kolkata arranged an international conference in July 2024 on Women in Quantum Science and Technologies. The meeting was part of celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of Bose’s seminal work, highlighting that his legacy encompasses both quantum science and gender equality in physics.

Group photo on steps of a science institute
Opportunity for change Women in Quantum Science and Technologies was a three-day conference held in Kolkata in July 2024. (Courtesy: S N Bose National Centre)

The three-day conference consisted of six talks from accomplished female scientists, two panel discussions, three special lectures, 10 invited talks from early-career women working across quantum science and technologies, and a poster session by PhD students. The panel discussions focused on the challenges faced by women in higher education and ways to overcome them, as well as opportunities for women in the quantum arena. Speakers included Rupamanjari Ghosh, Aditi Sen De, Indrani Bose, Anjana Devi, Shohini Ghose and Efrat Shimshoni.

Such events highlight the achievements of women in the field, providing a platform for sharing research and inspiring future generations. This visibility is crucial for normalizing women’s participation in science and encouraging girls to pursue careers in physics and related disciplines.

With the second quantum revolution in progress, and the next likely to be driven by commercial innovations in areas such as cybersecurity, eco-materials and medical advancements, it is important to ensure that these breakthroughs do not reinforce societal inequalities. For that, we need women, and other under-represented groups in physics, to be encouraged into the field to ensure a diverse range of ideas.

To this end, here we highlight some women at the forefront of quantum science in India. The list is far from exhaustive, but it offers a glimpse of the broader picture.

Women at the forefront of quantum science in India

Four Indian women
At the quantum frontier Clockwise from top left: Aditi Sen De, Urbasi Sinha, Usha Devi A R and Kasturi Saha. (Photos kindly supplied by their subjects)

Aditi Sen De

Aditi Sen De is a professor of physics at the Harish Chandra Research Institute in Allahabad. Her research exploits quantum mechanical principles to design quantum technologies, such as quantum communication networks, quantum thermal machines, and measurement-based quantum computers. She also characterizes resources responsible for achieving quantum technologies superior to their day-to-day versions.

Sen De was greatly inspired by her mother, a mathematics teacher, and developed a passion for teaching from an early age. “I used to teach using a small blackboard at home, imagining a classroom full of students,” she explains. She completed her bachelor’s degree at India’s oldest women’s college, Bethune College in Kolkata, before pursuing her interest in quantum and statistical physics at the University of Calcutta for her master’s. Alongside her husband – they grew together both personally and professionally – she continued her scientific journey in Europe, completing her PhD at the University of Gdansk in Poland, and then doing postdoctoral research in Germany and Spain.

In 2018 Sen De was awarded the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science and Technology (now the Vigyan Yuva – Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Award). Given by the Indian government to recognize talented young scientists in all disciplines, the prize is one of the most prestigious scientific accolades in India. First awarded in 1958, only two women have ever received this honour in the physical sciences category (now physics), out of 103 recipients – a stark reflection of the gender imbalance.

Urbasi Sinha

The only other woman to receive the Bhatnagar award is Urbasi Sinha, a professor at the Raman Research Institute in Bangalore. Her research spans experimental studies on photonic quantum information processing, secure quantum communication, and precision tests of quantum mechanics.

Sinha’s scientific journey was shaped by the constant support of her non-scientist parents, whose encouragement sparked her passion for discovery. After doing her undergraduate degree at Jadavpur University in Kolkata, Sinha went on to do a master’s and PhD at the University of Cambridge, UK. She has gained significant international recognition for her work, with recent honours including the Canada Excellence Research Chair in Photonic Quantum Science and Technologies, the Gates Cambridge Impact Prize, and the Royal Academy of Engineering UK’s Distinguished International Associateship. Sinha has also co-founded a quantum start-up, QuSyn Technologies, and leads a technical group under the NQM.

Meanwhile, as a mother raising a daughter, Sinha maintains a sense of work–life integration by being fully present – giving her complete attention to whatever requires it, whether personal or professional.

“Women in academia are breaking barriers as institutions embrace diversity,” says Sinha. “While explicit obstacles fall through targeted initiatives, the academic community now faces the vital challenge of identifying subtle biases woven into institutional fabric. This evolving awareness promises a future where talent thrives regardless of gender, transforming scholarship through diverse perspectives.”

Usha Devi A R

A professor at Bangalore University, Usha Devi A R is a theorist who has contributed to formulating figures of merit for non-classicality of photonic states – which are crucial for metrology, quantum target detection, quantum digital reading and more. Her team has put forth geometric visualization of spin states, which works like a fingerprint for entanglement and spin-squeezing, needed in metrology.

Devi was born in Thirthahalli town in Karnataka, where she completed her undergraduate degree in sciences. She was top of her class and received a gold medal for her master’s in physics from Mysore University, where she also completed her PhD in 1998. She received the IPA young physicist award in 1997, and was a visiting scientist in Barry Sander’s research group at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, in 2003. She also worked in Sandu Popescu’s research group at University of Bristol, UK, under a Commonwealth Academic Fellowship in 2008.

Working as a faculty member at a state-funded university comes with persistent challenges, such as limited resources for research and teaching, and sometimes outdated administrative priorities. “​In quantum mechanics, we embrace uncertainty,” Devi says. “In academia, we challenge it – especially as women physicists from state universities.”

Kasturi Saha

Kasturi Saha is an associate professor at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay (Mumbai). She is the project director of Qmet Tech Foundation, the quantum sensing and metrology hub established by IIT Bombay under the National Quantum Mission (NQM) of the Government of India. She is the only female project director among the four NQM hubs established.

Saha was raised in the lively heart of Kolkata’s Wellington Square, in a family filled with engineers and doctors. Drawn to the elegance of physics, she chose it as her major, inspired by the Nobel-winning work on Bose–Einstein condensates. Although she aspired to become a scientist, her decision was initially met with concern and scepticism from her family, who were worried about the challenges of pursuing a career in science – especially as female representation was (and still is) limited.

Despite their concerns, Saha’s parents stood firmly by her side, supporting her throughout every step of her academic journey. After her undergraduate physics degree from St Stephen’s College in Delhi, Saha moved to IIT Delhi for her master’s, and then went to Cornell University in the US for her PhD. As she progressed through her degrees, the gender gap became increasingly apparent, with a sharp decline in the number of women.

Training to be an experimental physicist brought its own set of biases – people often assumed Saha couldn’t handle technical tasks or heavy equipment. These subtle yet persistent doubts made her hyper-aware of her identity – she even stopped wearing pink T-shirts during her PhD. Yet, she persisted, bolstered by mentors including Michal Lipson and Paola Cappellaro.

Beyond academia

Impressive women in quantum science are not limited to academia. Government departments and industry in India can boast of some prominent female leaders. For example, Anindita Banerjee is a product manager for quantum technology projects at the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDACINDIA), a premier research and development organization founded by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology. Anupama Ray is an award-winning senior research scientist at IBM Research in Bangalore, where she focuses on developing quantum machine learning algorithms. Meanwhile at Microsoft India and South Asia, Rohini Srivathsa is the chief technology officer, responsible for driving technology innovation and growth across industry and the government.

In addition to the accomplished Indian women working in quantum in their home country, there are several who have built successful careers abroad. Notable cases are Anjana Devi, director of the Institute for Materials Chemistry at the Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research, Dresden, Germany; Nandini Trivedi, professor of physics at Ohio State University, US; Nilanjana Datta, professor in quantum information theory at the University of Cambridge, UK; Vidya Madhavan, professor of physics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, US; Shohini Ghose, professor of physics and computer science, and director of research and programmes for the Centre for Women in Science at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Canada, and chief technology officer at Quantum Algorithms Institute.

The rise of women in quantum science in India is a tribute to Bose’s legacy, and a sign of a more inclusive and dynamic future. To sustain this momentum, we must create ecosystems that support curiosity, collaboration and equal opportunity – ensuring that every brilliant mind, regardless of gender, has the chance to transform the world.

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