Carmen Lee
Carmen is a postdoctoral research fellow in the non-linear physics lab at North Carolina State University working with Dr. Karen Daniels. She earned her Ph.D. from McMaster University under the supervision of Dr. Kari Dalnoki-Veress in experimental soft matter physics.
Her area of expertise is soft matter physics, an interdisciplinary branch of physics that studies any material that is soft, squishy and deformable.
Apart from her research, Carmen participates in various science outreach activities and she is a passionate advocate for improving Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in STEM.
news
Jun 21, 2024 | I was invited to give a talk at the Granular Matter Gordon Research Seminar in 2024 for Early Career Researcher. Along with giving a poster, I was awarded a poster prize and was invited to give a talk at the Granular Matter Gordon Research Conference. |
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Jun 17, 2024 | New paper alert ![]() |
Mar 31, 2024 | A new preprint is up on the arXiv! First work out of the Daniels lab on how we can relate particle scale anisotropy measure to the bulk response in granular material. |
Mar 18, 2024 | I presented in the Soft, Living, Active and Adaptive Matter (SLAAM) seminar series. You can find the recording here |
Mar 03, 2024 | Squishy Science Sunday with APS March Meeting was a hit! I got to show off the new outreach activity using hoppers to study how granular material moves (or doesn’t) through a narrow spout! |