Entry Information
Barkotel Zemenu
Mr
Male

11/05/2002
Ethiopia
Passport
EP779
Ethiopian
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+12024591533
781 Escondido Road, Apt 802
Stanford
United States
Astronomy
Mathematical Sciences
For an alumnus of the prestigious Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in Physics, the Hong Kong Laureate Forum feels like the perfect sequel! I’m confident the plenary sessions will expose me to the Laureates’ latest research while offering deeper insight into their earlier achievements. I’m especially drawn to the Forum’s “beyond-passive-participation” design—with each breakout session providing a unique platform for active engagement with the Laureates and the 200+ fellow attendees. I especially look forward to the public forum, both to ask questions and to learn from the inquiries of others. In the spirit of knowledge exchange, I’m also excited to present my research as a Stanford PhD student (and former undergraduate researcher at Yale, Weizmann and the University of Munich) during the flash/poster sessions, sharing my findings with a community of like-minded peers. The chance to connect informally—during lab or school visits and the Gala dinner—makes the Forum even more valuable, offering me opportunities to build lasting relationships, even those that outlast those four days at Hong Kong Science Park. Above all, I hope to gain a fuller understanding of the perseverance, creativity, and serendipity that shape the lives of accomplished scientists.
Postgraduate (PhD)
Physics
Stanford University
Stanford, California, USA
Yale University
Weizmann Institute of Science
First Academic or Research Referee *
Kent Irwin
Stanford University
Professor of Particle Physics and Astrophysics
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Second Academic or Research Referee
Chelsea Bartram
Stanford University
Panofsky Fellow at Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
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Selected as Stanford's Knight-Hennessy Scholar (1% acceptance rate) and invited to the Lindau Nobel Meeting in Physics (3% acceptance rate). Received Yale’s Outstanding Undergraduate Award (only 5 students) inducted into Phi Beta Kappa (top 5%), and offered presidential graduate fellowships from Harvard, Princeton and Caltech. Recognized with scholarships from the American Institute of Physics and the national Sigma Pi Sigma honor society, and awarded for outstanding talks by the American Physical Society. Earned several Yale accolades for academic excellence, leadership, and research, including the recognition of scoring the highest grade in Quantum Mechanics.
See attached links in CV (awards come from Stanford, Yale, and a dozen other institutions/organizations)
The nature of dark matter stands tall among the most prominent physics mysteries of the past half-century, with the axion emerging as the most compelling candidate. The Dark Matter Radio (DMRadio) is an experiment searching for low-mass axions while also serving as a testbed for novel quantum devices. Operating in the lumped-element regime, the experiment is designed to detect the signal induced by the interaction of dark matter axions with the detector’s toroidal magnet. This signal is inductively picked up by a superconducting sheath, resonantly amplified by an LC resonator, and cryogenically read out using a low-noise amplifier. For maximal sensitivity, the amplifier noise must achieve a delicate trade-off between measurement imprecision noise, backaction noise, and coupling to loss in the amplifier. My research develops the noise optimization principles intended to ensure that DMRadio couples to and detects the dark matter axion signal, should it exist.
Both Sessions
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