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Meanwhile, back in the science block, the teenage ballet student was gradually falling in love with physics. Like it or not, STEM subjects remain a hard sell for girls and it clearly galls Moore that so many are turned off by unimaginative teaching and a dearth of female role models. Only 3 per cent of Nobel science laureates have worn a dress to Stockholm. Even today, barely one in five physics postgraduates is female. “All the textbooks are written by men,” complains Moore. “I’ve never had a female physics professor.”
In 2006, Moore won a place to read physics at Harvard but she found time to audition for the nearby Boston Ballet, dancing in the corps of La Bayadère, sometimes returning to the lab between matinee and evening performances. The university was extraordinarily accommodating. “Harvard’s so remarkable,” Moore says. “They encourage students to take opportunities.”
Most of my life has been a very hermit, horse-blinders-on kind of lifestyle. I went to maybe three parties my entire time at Harvard ANDIEZ Personalized Nail Salon I Can’t Change The World But I Can Change Your Nail Poster
Having graduated in 2011, Moore began a PhD in atomic and laser physics at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Her dissertation (“The counterintuitive duality of light in quantum optics”) inevitably ate into her time at the barre but she managed to score an audition with Tamara Rojo’s English National Ballet, joining the chorus for the 2014-15 season of Swan Lake and The Nutcracker.
Moore could hardly have chosen two less forgiving, more labour-intensive disciplines. How could she possibly have crammed it all in? Her answer is as dispiriting as it is obvious. “I slept maybe five hours a night throughout college — maybe less? Every minute of my day I was working. I’d be on the treadmill with my physics books,” she says. “To be honest, I wouldn’t recommend that level of sleep. But I had that dream and the fire was so strong I don’t think I could have slept even if I’d wanted to.” Ballet was her only extra curricular activity. “Most of my life has been a very hermit, horse-blinders-on kind of lifestyle. I went to maybe three parties my entire time at Harvard . . .”
The 33-year-old “quantum ballerina” is now in huge demand on the lecture circuit, both as an example of creativity in science and as a brand ambassador for women in physics. She gives talks and serves on various panels but the most striking expression of the sci-arts synthesis is her work with the Baryshnibot, a UR10e collaborative industrial robot built by the Universal Robot Company, which Moore has programmed to “dance” short duets.
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