Experience

My scientific path has been shaped by a sequence of cities, people, and research cultures across Europe. I began in Madrid, where I trained as a materials scientist and nanophotonics researcher, working on material aspects of complex photonic structures and disorder-driven light transport.

A strong and formative connection to Italy, especially Florence, introduced me to the broader physics of complexity, multiple scattering, and nonlinear light–matter interaction, deeply influencing my scientific perspective.

I then moved to Copenhagen, where my work shifted toward quantum nanophotonics, and where I discovered the power of imperfections as a physical resource rather than a limitation. I later settled in Barcelona, driven by a desire to explore dynamical systems and the interaction of light with thermal Brownian motion, opening the door to fully complex and emergent dynamical regimes in optomechanical systems.

Today, this trajectory connects materials science, mesoscopic physics, quantum photonics, and optomechanics into a unified research line focused on complexity, emergence, and physical information processing.


Professional positions