Lisa Dyson Explained
Lisa Dyson is an American scientist, physicist, and entrepreneur. She is the founder and CEO of Kiverdi, a biotechnology company that uses carbon transformation technologies to develop sustainable products for commercial applications, including agriculture, plastics, and biodegradable materials.[1] [2] She is also the founder and CEO of Air Protein, a spin-off company from Kiverdi, which seeks to produce sustainable meat alternatives from elements found in air.[3]
She earned a PhD in theoretical high energy physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2004. She is a TED speaker in residence and was the fourth Black woman (and one of only six) to earn a PhD in theoretical high energy, nuclear, or quantum gravity physics.[4] [5]
Early life and education
Dyson grew up in Southern California and completed degrees in physics and mathematics at Brandeis University in 1997. After meeting several physics professors at Brandeis, she became more interested in pursuing physics research. She was a Fulbright Scholar at Imperial College London, where she studied quantum field theory and earned a Masters of Science degree in physics.[6]
Dyson earned her PhD at the MIT Center for Theoretical Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2004, working with Leonard Susskind on quantum gravity, general relativity, and string theory.[7] [8] She also worked with Susskind and Matthew Kleban on the Boltzmann Brain problem, publishing on the topic in the Journal of High Energy Physics in 2002.[9] [10] She was the fourth black woman to earn a PhD in theoretical high energy physics.[11]
For her PhD thesis, Dyson conducted a study explaining how the string theory can be used to talk about general relativity and theoretical physics concepts like naked singularities, time travel, and horizon complementarity. For instance, in her analysis of time travel, she explained how general relativity allows the possibility of time travel, but such an event would introduce geometries that violate causality, a fundamental physical law. However, she then explained that there are causality-violating regions that would allow for time travel but they can not be constructed due to the stringy effects in the string theory. In short, Dyson's work tackled the complex relationship between fundamental physics principles and the theoretical consequences arising from string theory.
Career
After completing her PhD, Dyson joined the University of California, Berkeley and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Stanford University, University of California San Francisco, and Princeton University. She worked as a management consultant at Boston Consulting Group between 2004 and 2006, where she helped multi-national companies manage and run their business. She has worked with the chemical, energy, transportation, travel, automotive, packaging, and telecommunications industries.[12]
In 2008 she co-founded Kiverdi with Dr. John Reed, a biotechnology company that uses microbes to turn carbon dioxide and carbon-rich waste, such as wood and agricultural residue, into alternative fuels, protein replacements, oils, and biodegradable materials for applications such as food and agriculture.[13] The technology is based on a space-age technology developed by NASA in the 1960s, where astronauts used microbes called hydrogenotrophs to convert carbon dioxide in exhaled breath into nutrient rich crops.[14] She started to grow the microbes in her lab, working with manufacturers to scale-up their technology. The company did not really grow until 2011, when they first received grants from the U.S. Department of Energy and formed partnerships with many chemical manufacturers.[15] Kiverdi now has over 40 patents granted or pending, and a second company, Air Protein, which was established to focus on sustainable food production. Dyson serves as the CEO of Air Protein.
Media and speaking appearances
She has delivered several TED talks, including "Turning CO2 into Oil" at TEDxFulbright in May 2014, and "A forgotten Space Age technology could change how we grow food" in July 2016, which has been viewed over one million times. She has spoken about carbon recycling, and appeared on the PBS Nova program Decoding the Weather Machine in April 2018.
Honors and awards
- 2012 Sustainable Biofuels Award for a "Leader in Bio-based Chemical Industry", World Biofuels Markets[16] [17]
- 2012 grant of $750,000 for Research, Demonstration, and Development program for its "efforts to develop beneficial uses of carbon dioxide" and was selected through competitive peer-review as an industrial user at the U.S. Department of Energy's Molecular Foundry, California Energy Commission[18]
- 2013 "40 Under 40", San Francisco Business Times[19]
- 2014 Entrepreneurship Award, U.S. Clean Energy Education & Empowerment (C3E) Initiative[20]
- 2015 "One of the Most Influential Women in the Bay Area", San Francisco Business Times [21]
- 2016 "One of the Most Influential Women in the Bay Area", San Francisco Business Times
- 2017 One of the Most Creative People in Business, Fast Company
- 2018 Women in Natural Sciences Award, "which honors an outstanding female innovator in the STEM field, whose visionary contributions in science have made a positive impact on the world", Academy of Natural Science at Drexel University[22]
- 2019 Top 100 Female Founders, Inc. Magazine[23]
- 2021 Female Thought Leader of the Year, Stevie Awards for Women in Business[24]
- 2021 Most Innovative Woman of the Year - Technology, Stevie Awards for Women in Business[25]
- 2022 Most Influential Women in Bay Area Business, San Francisco Business Times [26]
- 2023 Power 100, San Francisco Business Times[27]
- 2023 Lewis Latimer Fellow, The Edison Awards[28]
- Forever Influential Honor Roll, San Francisco Business Times[29]
External links
- Patent: Industrial fatty acid engineering general system for modifying fatty acids. United States patent US20130089899A1. https://patents.google.com/patent/US20130089899A1/en
- Patent: Engineered CO2-Fixing Chemotrophic Microorganisms Producing Carbon-Based Products and Methods of Using the Same. United States patent US20150017694A1. https://patents.google.com/patent/US20150017694A1/en https://t.me/@lisadyson_com
Notes and References
- News: National Public Radio (NPR). All Tech Considered.
- RaceOnTech: How An Early Love Of Math Led Her To The Role Of CEO
. en. NPR.org. 2018-05-01.
- News: Lisa Dyson, Most Creative People 2017 Fast Company. en-US. Fast Company. 2018-05-01.
- Web site: Team. 2021-02-21. AIR PROTEIN. en-US.
- Web site: Dyson. Lisa. Lisa Dyson Speaker TED. 2020-06-10. www.ted.com. en.
- Web site: About. 2020-06-10. Kiverdi, Inc.. en-US.
- Web site: Harnessing the Power of Waste Brandeis Magazine. 2018-04-30. Brandeis Magazine. en.
- Web site: PhD Alumna Lisa Dyson Founder and CEO of Kiverdi Office of Graduate Education. 2020-06-11.
- 2004. Three lessons in causality : what string theory has to say about naked singularities, time travel and horizon complementarity. 1721.1/17744. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Thesis. Dyson. Lisa. Ph.D..
- News: Overbye. Dennis. 2008. Big Brain Theory: Have Cosmologists Lost Theirs?. en-US. The New York Times. 2018-04-30. 0362-4331.
- Dyson. Lisa. Kleban. Matthew. Susskind. Leonard. 2002. Disturbing Implications of a Cosmological Constant. Journal of High Energy Physics. en. 2002. 10. 011. hep-th/0208013. 2002JHEP...10..011D. 10.1088/1126-6708/2002/10/011. 2344440 . 1126-6708.
- Web site: The Five Black Women PhDs of Theoretical High Energy Physics. Prescod-Weinstein. Chanda. 2015-05-24. Medium. 2018-04-30.
- Web site: Circular - Closing the loop: how a forgotten Space Age technology could change how we grow our food - Mediachange - Casestudyourself!. mediachange.info. en. 2018-04-30.
- Web site: Peters. Adele. 2019-11-12. The newest fake meat is made from thin air. 2020-06-11. Fast Company. en-US.
- Web site: Greathouse. John. Here's How Lisa Dyson's Startup Is Reducing World Hunger AND Combating Climate Change. 2020-06-11. Forbes. en.
- Web site: Food for thought: How to feed the world with old school NASA tricks – fruitworldmedia. 2018-04-30. fruitworldmedia.com. en-US.
- Relations. Scoville Public. 2012-03-14. World Biofuels Markets Announces Winners of Sustainable Biofuels Awards. 2020-06-11. GlobeNewswire News Room.
- Web site: 2012-03-14. Kiverdi, Inc. Wins Top Honors For Its Innovative Approach to Producing Sustainable Chemicals From Carbon-rich Waste - Bio-based News -. 2020-06-11. Bio-based News. en.
- News: Kiverdi Receives Energy Commission Funding for Its Pioneering Carbon Conversion Platform. en-US. GlobeNewswire News Room. 2018-04-30.
- Web site: March 1, 2013. Lisa Dyson:CEO, Kiverdi Inc.. 2020-06-11. www.bizjournals.com.
- Web site: Lisa Dyson: Entrepreneurship Award Winner. 2018-04-30. c3eawards.org. en-US.
- United States Department of Energy . 2015 . Bioenergy 2015 Speaker Biographies . United States Department of Energy . 2024-08-02.
- Web site: The Academy of Natural Science at Drexel University. 2018-04-02. WINS Marks 35 Years of Making a Difference. 2020-06-11. ansp.org. en.
- Web site: Lisa Dyson is on Inc.'s 2019 Female Founders 100 list . Inc.com . 1970-01-01 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: Female Thought Leader of the Year . Stevie Awards . 2022-01-17 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: Most Innovative Woman of the Year . Stevie Awards . 2022-01-17 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: Influential Women 2022: Lisa Dyson of Air Protein . San Francisco Business Times . 2022-10-07 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: San Francisco Bay Area Power 100: The business people you need to know . San Francisco Business Times . 2023-02-23 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: Edison Awards Announces 2023 Lewis Latimer Fellows . Edison Awards . 2023-04-13 . 2024-08-14.
- Web site: Lisa Dyson . The Clean Energy Education & Empowerment (C3E) Initiative . 2024-08-02.