University of California, Merced

08/07/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 08/07/2024 20:00

Fulbright Award Sends Physics Grad Student to France for Quantum Research

She leaves soon to spend 10 months at a satellite campus of the Université Paris-Saclay in Orsay. Starting Sept. 1, she will study quantum computing solutions with Professor Leonardo Mazza, an expert in fractional quantum spin, a new direction for her dissertation research.

Seshappan's road to science, and specifically physics, wasn't direct.

In high school, she failed chemistry. Later, she continued her education at Chabot College, a community college in Hayward. While there, her chemistry professor told her she excelled at the subject.

"Having someone tell me I was good at something for the first time in my life meant everything to me," she said. "Now, I'm in a Ph.D. program; it wouldn't have happened if she hadn't said that to me."

Seshappan later transferred to UCLA and earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry.

After graduation, she explored graduate school options but was told she needed to strengthen her physics experience. She applied to the California State University Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation Bridge to Doctorate program - a comprehensive, statewide program dedicated to broadening participation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines.

"I participated in the physics program, and I thought, 'Oh my God, I love it,'" Seshappan said. "I should have done physics from the beginning."

She applied to graduate programs and found the right fit with Strubbe. She also learned the percentage of female faculty in UC Merced's Department of Physics is higher than the national average, and that sealed her decision.

Ultimately, Seshappan looks forward to teaching at a historically Black college or Hispanic-serving institution to provide opportunities to people who wouldn't normally have them.

"I went to a community college where most of the people were Black or Hispanic and didn't have opportunities. The people I met at Chabot College are some of the smartest people that I've ever met," she said.