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Physics researcher a radio star

  • 21 November 2023
  • 3 minutes

Talking about her work has provided a potential career avenue for Simone Eizagirre Barker (Physics PhD 2019), after she became a regular guest of a radio show.

Simone and a friend relaunched the Cambridge University Science Magazine BlueSci podcast in 2020. After being interviewed by a science magazine she was invited to be a one-off guest on a radio show in her native Basque region of Spain. She was next invited to join the editorial team who founded the Department of Physics鈥 official podcast, People Doing Physics, which she still co-hosts.

And now Simone has a 10-minute segment, fortnightly, on Euskadi Irratia, the Basque Autonomous Community鈥檚 public broadcast radio.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a chat between me and the host,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 live radio, you have to be prepared. I come up with the topics and general script for the discussion.鈥

For Simone appearing on radio was about saying 鈥榶es鈥 to opportunities.

She adds: 鈥淭here鈥檚 so many things you can explore at university. I wouldn鈥檛 be on the radio just now if I hadn鈥檛 started podcasting with BlueSci almost four years ago when I started my PhD. Not everything has to be part of a 10-year plan, you can just do things because they sound interesting and see how it goes. That鈥檚 something I鈥檝e tried to maintain, and it鈥檚 opened a lot of serendipitous doors.鈥



Simone has used her segment so far to discuss the Nobel Prize, computer giant IBM鈥檚 plans for a new quantum computer centre in , in the Basque region, and the United Kingdom returning to Horizon Europe following a post-Brexit absence.

She adds: 鈥淚 really do enjoy journalism. I鈥檝e always done it as a side project, but as more and more opportunities have come up, I鈥檝e realised people are responding positively to work that I鈥檓 doing and inviting me to be part of new opportunities.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested in the implications and impact of science 鈥 the relationship science has with society. How we discuss science infrastructure and innovation, ethics of new technologies, how science can address global challenges鈥︹

Simone is nearing the end of her own PhD and considering what happens next. In 2021 she was awarded the largest and most prestigious scholarship by SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, for her potential contributions to the field. Her research on experimental quantum optics is about studying the quantum mechanics of new materials to see how they could be useful for light-based quantum technologies in the future.

There are personal reasons which contribute to her motivation to feature on the radio. It gives her an opportunity to speak Basque, which she does almost solely with her family and childhood friends, and an opportunity to talk in Basque about science, a subject she has mostly studied in English.

She adds: 鈥淚t creates a link between my life in Cambridge and back home; it鈥檚 nice to feel what I鈥檓 doing is not isolated. My friends and family can listen to it, and it鈥檚 an amazing opportunity to think about the world of science in a wider context.鈥

You can find the Cavendish Laboratory鈥檚 , or listen to Simone live on Euskadi Irratia at 10:20am GMT+1 every other Friday.