Silke Weinfurtner Explained

Silke Weinfurtner
Fields:
Workplaces:University of Nottingham
Education:
    Doctoral Advisor:Matt Visser
    Awards:

    Silke Weinfurtner is a British physicist at the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom. Weinfurtner is best known for her research into black holes and is considered a pioneer in the field of analog gravity.

    Career

    Weinfurtner studied theoretical physics at the Technical University of Munich and the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, under the direction of quantum physicist Ignacio Cirac. She earned her PhD from the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, studying under the supervision of physicist Matt Visser.[1]

    In 2017, Weinfurtner and her team built an experiment using a custom water bath to simulate the conditions around a black hole. Weinfurtner traces the origin of the technique to her time working at the International School for Advanced Studies in Italy where she "setup an experiment with a bucket and a bidet". After her postdoc, she went on to work with Bill Unruh, discoverer of the Unruh effect.[2]

    Weinfurtner set up her own research group at the University of Nottingham in a space called the "Black Hole Laboratory".[3] [4] Her research focuses on trying to mimic the conditions of the Big Bang, using superconducting magnets in a large bathtub to simulate cosmological effects.[5] Comparing real black holes with her analog gravity experiments, Weinfurtner expresses wonder that the "startling mathematical similarities between them that emerge under certain conditions can be exploited", saying that "it just seems like nature threw us a bone when things are really hard".[6] By decreasing the temperature in the water bath, Weinfurtner and her team were able to create a Bose-Einstein condensate, mimicking wave propagation in the early universe.[7]

    Awards and honors

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Silke Weinfurtner . GravityLaboratory.com . 22 October 2023 . en.
    2. . Scientists make waves with black hole research . . 14 June 2017 . 22 October 2023.
    3. News: Eureka! Scientists explore mysteries of black holes with hi-tech bathtub . . Devlin . Hannah . 14 July 2023 . 22 October 2023 . en.
    4. Book: Modelwork: The Material Culture of Making and Knowing . . Brückner . Martin . Isenstadt . Sandy . Wasserman . Sarah . 21 October 2021 . 72 . 9781452965420 . 27 October 2023.
    5. To Understand the Universe, Physicists Are Building Their Own . . Moskvitch . Katia . 16 March 2018 . 22 October 2023 . en.
    6. Web site: She Turns Fluids Into 'Black Holes' and 'Inflating Universes' . . Lewton . Thomas . 12 December 2022 . 22 October 2023 . en.
    7. Web site: An early universe analog built in a lab in Germany . Yirka . Bob . . 27 November 2022 . 27 October 2023 . en.
    8. Web site: Dr. Silke Weinfurtner . . 28 October 2023 . en.
    9. Web site: Vidi 2012 . . 28 October 2023 . en.
    10. Web site: Annual Buchalter Cosmology Prize Announces Jack Ng as 2018 Winner . Cimmino . Jhon . . 6 February 2019 . 28 October 2023 . en.