Aditi Mitra
Aditi Mitra is an Indian-American theoretical condensed matter physicist known for her research on molecular scale electronics and non-equilibrium quantum systems. Other topics in her research include floquet theory and topological insulators. She is a professor of physics at New York University.
Education and career[]
Mitra studied physics at Presidency College, graduating in 1993, and earned a master's degree in physics in 1995 at IIT Kanpur. She came to the US for doctoral study in physics at Indiana University Bloomington, and completed her Ph.D. there in 2002.[1] Her dissertation, Transport and spin-pseudospin domain walls in integer quantum Hall systems, was supervised by Steven Girvin.[2]
She became a postdoctoral researcher at Columbia University and the University of Toronto before joining the New York University faculty in 2006.[1]
Recognition[]
Mitra was named a Simons Fellow in Theoretical Physics in 2013.[3] In 2018, Mitra was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Division of Condensed Matter Physics, "for pioneering theoretical studies of out-of-equilibrium quantum systems, including nonequilibrium criticality, topological phenomena under time-periodic driving, and the dynamics of entanglement statistics".[4]
References[]
- ^ a b "Aditi Mitra", Institute of Physics, NYU Shanghai, New York University, retrieved 2021-01-27
- ^ Aditi Mitra at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ Faculty honors reception (PDF), New York University, 25 November 2013, p. 10, retrieved 2021-01-27
- ^ "Fellows nominated in 2018 by the Division of Condensed Matter Physics", APS Fellows archive, American Physical Society, retrieved 2021-01-27
External links[]
- Home page
- Aditi Mitra publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Living people
- American physicists
- American women physicists
- Fellows of the American Physical Society
- Presidency University, Kolkata alumni
- Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur alumni
- New York University faculty
- 21st-century American women