I'm a physicist with a weak spot for neutrinos and (real Italian) pizza.



My name is Linda Cremonesi and I am an experimental particle physicist at Queen Mary University of London. My main scientific interest is in neutrino physics, with research interests spanning neutrino oscillations, neutrino interactions and neutrino astronomy. I spent the years of my PhD working on the T2K and Hyper-Kamiokande experiments (being a current and future long-baseline neutrino experiments in Japan). In 2015 I went on to do a post-doc at UCL, looking for Ultra High Energy neutrinos (and cosmic rays) in Antarctica collaborating with the ANITA and ARA experiments, making leading contributions to the integration and commissioning of ANITA-IV in Antarctica in 2016. In 2015 I also joined the NOvA and DUNE neutrino oscillation experiments. On NOvA I co-convene the Near Detector working group, overseeing the 15 neutrino interaction cross-section analyses currently in progress. On DUNE I co-convene the Near Detector Reconstruction and Software working group. In 2020, I was awarded a £1.5M UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship and joined the Particle Physics Research Centre at Queen Mary University of London as a Fellow and Lecturer in Particle Physics. Navigate through the top bar to find out more!
Read More