Dr Soumyodeep Dey PhD

Dr Soumyodeep Dey

School of Physics and Astronomy
Research Fellow

Contact details

Address
School of Metallurgy and Materials
Elms Road
Birmingham
B152SE

Soumyodeep Dey is a research fellow at the UK Quantum Technology Research Hub in Sensing, Imaging and Timing (QuSIT), working on the laser system development for new gradiometer sensor technology. Soumyodeep has over eight years of experience in lasers and optical physics, including continuous and pulsed laser systems and ultracold atomic physics. His current research interest involves the efficient laser system design for the new QuSIT gradiometer sensor, designed for civil engineering and navigation applications.

Qualifications

PhD in Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Madras 2021
MSc in Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Madras 2015
BSc (Hons) in Physics, RKMRC (Autonomous), Narendrapur 2013

Biography

Soumyodeep Dey qualified with a BSc (Hons) in Physics from RKMRC Narendrapur in 2013. After his MSc in Physics in 2015 from IIT Madras, he went on to study for a PhD in Physics at the same Institute.

Soumyodeep went on to work on a company-sponsored project to develop an instrument to measure laser parameters, before joining the Quantum Sensing group at University of Birmingham in 2022, where he worked on the UK AION project until March 2025. Soumyodeep currently works on the development of an efficient laser system design for gravity gradiometry technology.

Soumyodeep has also supervised a summer internship student in 2024 on machine-learning based optimisation in optical and atomic experiments.

Teaching

Quantum Sensing group study 2024
Quantum Sensing group study 2025

Research

Soumyodeep's research involves the development of an efficient and compact laser system for the new QuSIT gradiometer. The laser system will be used to generate cold atom samples of rubidium as well as perform the atom interferometry and detection. The proposed gradiometer will be used in the field for navigation and civil engineering applications. Soumyodeep is responsible for the design, and undertakes research with the goal of making the system power efficient and reliable for field application.

Previously, Soumyodeep worked as part of the AION collaboration, of which the University of Birmingham is a partner. AION aims to develop a strontium-based large scale atom interferometry to detect gravitational waves and ultralight dark matter. The University of Birmingham's contribution focuses on large momentum transfer for increased efficiency of the detector.

During his PhD, Soumyodeep studied the effect of continuous as well as pulsed lasers on materials. He was also involved in generation of non-gaussian beam and the characterisation of the same. He worked on instrumentation and computer interfacing of the experimental setups, and gained experience in high power laser systems and published several journal articles throughout his PhD times.