Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Francesca Vidotto
Female Italian theoretical physicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Francesca Vidotto (born November 22, 1980) is an Italian theoretical physicist.
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for academics. (February 2025) |

Remove ads
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
She earned her UG/MA in theoretical physics at the University of Padova and the PhD as double-degree at the University of Pavia and the Aix-Marseille Université. Afterwards, she was a postdoc researcher at the universities of Grenoble, Nijmegen and Bilbao.[1] She was awarded a Rubicon (2012) and a Veni (2014) fellowship by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research.[2] From 2019, she has been an Assistant Professor of Physics & Astronomy and Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario, where she held a Canada Research Chair in Foundations of Physics. She has been also a core member and associate director of Western's Rotman Institute of Philosophy.[3]
Her research explores the quantum aspects of the gravitational field, in the framework of Loop Quantum Gravity. Her work covers topics from the cosmological and astrophysical applications of quantum gravity to the reflections on the nature of space-time and the foundations of quantum mechanics. She is best known for two research directions: Spin foam Cosmology, and Planck stars, with special emphasis on white holes and black hole remnants. Her main research interests have been cosmology, the quantum effect of black holes, and the foundations of quantum mechanics.[4]
Vidotto won the first prize (shared with Amanda Gefter) in the 2023 FQXi contest "How could science be different?" for her essay "How Could Science Be Different? Ask a feminist!". She is an advocate for equity, inclusion and diversity in the physics field.[5] She also believes philosophy and physics go hand in hand.[6]
Remove ads
Publications
Scientific book
- Covariant Loop Quantum Gravity: An elementary introduction (with Carlo Rovelli), Cambridge University Press, 2015.[7]
Main scientific papers
- Primordial Fluctuations from Quantum Gravity (with Francesco Gozzini), 2019.[9]
- Quantum insights on Primordial Black Holes as Dark Matter, 2018.[10]
- Planck stars (with Carlo Rovelli), 2014.[11]
- Maximal acceleration in covariant loop gravity and singularity resolution (with Carlo Rovelli), 2013.[12]
- Towards spinfoam cosmology (with Eugenio Bianchi and Carlo Rovelli), 2010.[13]
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads