Science Communication · RWTH Aachen

The art of making
science
understood.

Whether presented on stage, visualised as an infographic, or written as a text — science belongs to everyone. I make it accessible.

E = mc² ψ(x,t) ℏ∂ψ/∂t ∇²φ = 0 e⁻ↄe⁺
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Three ways to make complexity
shine.

01 —

🎤

Stage Talks & Keynotes

From Science Slams to keynote lectures — I bring physics to the stage. Energy, clarity, and genuine enthusiasm for the invisible forces that govern our world.

02 —

📊

Infographics & Visualisation

Quantum physics as an image. Complex data as a story. I create visual explanations that stick — not through oversimplification, but through genuine clarity.

03 —

✍️

Science Writing & Content

Articles, blog posts, educational materials. I write with precision and life, free of jargon — for everyone who wants to understand what happens inside the world's labs.

Physicist. Lecturer. Storyteller
of the quantum world.

I am a PhD candidate at the Chair of Experimental Physics and the II. Institute of Physics at RWTH Aachen University. My research focuses on the quantum Hall effect in graphene: how electrons behave on a "dancing" substrate — and how we can harness that behaviour to eliminate electrical resistance.

I hold two Master's degrees — in Experimental Physics and Theoretical Physics — and I firmly believe that good science must be shared. Available online for collaborations worldwide.

🏆
Best Supportive Teaching Award
Physics Teaching Award · RWTH Aachen · 2021
View Award →
🎤
Science Slam Winner
Cologne · January 2025 · "The Dance of Electron Quantum"

Grounded in theory
and experiment.

Degrees

2× M.Sc. Physics

RWTH Aachen University
Experimental Physics & Theoretical Physics

Research

PhD Candidate

Chair of Experimental Physics
II. Institute of Physics · RWTH Aachen
Quantum Hall Effect in Graphene & Superconductivity

Teaching

Instructor & Science Mentor

Experimental Physics · Theoretical Physics
Award-winning lecturer, 2021

Communication

Science Slam & Outreach

Award-winning Science Slam performer
Specialised in quantum physics for broad audiences

The dance of electrons —
what's really going on.

Graphene

Electrons with no effective mass

In graphene — a single layer of carbon atoms — electrons travel at 1/100th the speed of light and behave as massless particles. Strong, flexible, light on their feet: perfect for dancing.

Quantum Hall Effect

Conductor and insulator at once

Under a strong magnetic field, the bulk of the material becomes an insulator — but electrons at the edges conduct with zero resistance. One material that simultaneously insulates and conducts.

Spin Transport

Spin as the key

When the substrate itself starts "dancing" (SrTiO₃), electrons decouple from one another. Each electron discovers its own spin — and opposite spin types flow in opposite directions, opening a path to dissipationless transport.

Superconductivity

Cooper pairs & zero resistance

Electrons that fall in love: Cooper pairs overcome material defects with zero resistance. The open question — what happens when a lone electron meets a superconducting pair? That's what we're finding out.

What I speak
and write about.

Quantum Mechanics Electron Dynamics High-Energy Physics Particle Physics Science Communication Experimental Physics Theoretical Physics CERN & Large Hadron Collider Science & Society Physics in Everyday Life Women in Science Science Slam

What participants say about
The Art of Presentation.

Let's tell
science
stories
together.

Whether for talks, workshops, infographics or written content — I'm available online and look forward to hearing from you.