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Sushma Grellscheid is a professor at the Computational Biology Unit where her group uses computer science to study cells and their components. Together with physicist Justas Zalieckas, she is leading the effort to study biological material in a new way.

Quantum sensing has made a lot of progress in the last decade, creating partnerships of scientists using the technology to analyse cells with a new level of detail.

Grellscheid works at the Department of informatics with a background in biology, but says she finds it exciting to be working across fields.

鈥淣ot often do biologists ask; 鈥榃hat can I learn about a cell from watching the contents wobble? Scientifically, of course,鈥 says Grellscheid.

Different materials will wobble differently and can reveal what the cell is made of.

鈥淭his is the physics angle, and we ask how these qualities change during disease and aging. How to we measure it? What does it tell us about biology?鈥

A new field emerges

While the University of Bergen has already had a research environment within quantum physics, the new 鈥渜uantum revolution鈥 is leading to new collaborations and projects across the sciences.

鈥淲e already have the competency, so we will be doing work in this field no matter what. The question is whether we鈥檒l be in the forefront of the quantum revolution, or if we鈥檒l be a niche.鈥

Aiming for the first option, Zalieckas and Grellscheid have applied to the NFR to co-lead a new center called 鈥淐ellPHY鈥.

The centre would use quantum sensing to research living cells as systems,聽mapping electromagnetic, thermal, and chemical fields within cells.

Grellscheid is highly motivated for the new era of quantum sensing:

鈥淲e need to use modern computing power to study systems as a whole, and this approach is birthing a new field of study 鈥 Systems Physics of the Cell."