Päivi Törmä graduated with a master's degree from the University of Oulu and the University of Cambridge.[4] She earned a PhD in theoretical physics from the University of Helsinki[4] in 1996, under the supervision of Stig Stenholm. She worked as a postdoc at the University of Ulm in the group of Wolfgang Schleich, and as a Marie Curie Fellow at the University of Innsbruck in the group of Peter Zoller. In 2001 she became a professor at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. She moved to Aalto University (at that time Helsinki University of Technology) in 2008, and was an invited guest professor at ETH Zurich in 2015. Päivi Törmä has served the academic community by leading the Nanoscience Centre at University of Jyväskylä 2002-2005, as director of the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in Computational Nanoscience 2013-2017, vice chair of the Academy of Finland board 2010-2014, and member of the Research and Innovation Council chaired by the prime minister of Finland 2007-2015. She was the chair of the Millennium Technology Prize International Selection Committee 2017-2024.
Päivi Törmä is married since 2001 and has two children, born 2002 and 2006.[citation needed]
Research
In her doctoral research Päivi Törmä developed theory for optical multiports and their usage in measuring the quantum state of light.[5] During her postdoc in Innsbruck, she was one of the first theorists to initiate work on ultracold Fermi gases, and proposed a spectroscopic probe of superfluidity.[6][7] In Jyväskylä, she started experiments in nanophotonics and plasmonics. This research has led to pioneering observations of strong-coupling,[8][9][10] lasing,[11][12] and condensation[13] phenomena in nanoplasmonic systems. Her theory work has revealed a quantum geometric contribution of superfluidity[14] which can provide superconductivity in flat bands.[15]
Books
Päivi Törmä and Klaus Sengstock (editors), Quantum Gas Experiments: Exploring Many-Body States, Imperial College Press, London and Singapore 2015.