Nathalie de Leon
Nathalie Pulmones de Leon (born 1982) is a Filipino-American chemist, physicist, and associate professor in the department of electrical and computer engineering at Princeton University. Her research focuses on building quantum technologies with solid state defects and the identification of novel materials systems for superconducting qubits.[1] She was awarded the 2023 American Physical Society Rolf Landauer and Charles H. Bennett Award in Quantum Computing.[2] Early life and educationNathalie de Leon was born in Makati, the Philippines, in 1982 and raised in California.[3][4] Her parents were also born in the Philippines. Her maternal grandfather was a commercial seaman who was stationed in San Francisco during the attack on Pearl Harbor, and was subsequently offered U.S. citizenship contingent on joining the United States Coast Guard. de Leon spent part of her childhood in the Philippines but completed high school in the United States.[4] De Leon was an undergraduate student at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. She completed her undergraduate research in the laboratory of Richard Zare, where she worked on laser spectroscopy. She performed laser-based mass spectrometry on meteoritic samples to explore chemical reactions in space.[1] de Leon moved to Harvard University for her doctoral research in chemical physics, where she joined the laboratory of Hongkun Park. Her research looked to achieve nanoscale confinement of electrons and photons.[5] She developed a nanoscale plasmon resonator capable of tailoring specific light-matter interactions, and demonstrated it convert a broadband emitter to a narrow-band single-photon source.[6] de Leon remained at Harvard University as a postdoctoral researcher, working with Mikhail Lukin.[citation needed] Awards and honors
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Personal lifede Leon is married, and met her husband while she was completing her postdoc appointment at Harvard and he was finishing his PhD.[4] References
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