Yin Chun Chan
Publicity for the Physics Society should feel like a superposition of excitement, creativity, and scientific mischief — the kind of atmosphere where quantum jokes land with more certainty than a collapsed wavefunction. The society deserves publicity that behaves like a well‑tuned harmonic oscillator: stable, clear, and full of energy.
Every event can shine with the luminosity of a photon freshly emitted from an excited atom. Posters and announcements can ripple through campus like constructive interference, amplifying enthusiasm and drawing students into the vibrant community that makes physics at Imperial so special. Whether the topic is quantum tunnelling, celestial mechanics, or the mysterious behaviour of coffee cups left in the Blackett common room, publicity can carry the signal with minimal noise.
A touch of humour — the kind that only physicists appreciate, such as “never trust an atom, they make up everything” — can turn ordinary updates into memorable moments. With the right approach, even a simple social can feel like a resonance peak.
The Physics Society is a place where ideas collide elastically, friendships form with strong binding energy, and curiosity spreads faster than a photon in vacuum. Publicity should reflect that: dynamic, colourful, and full of the joy that comes from exploring the universe one equation at a time.
Here’s to wave‑like outreach, quantum‑level creativity, and a community that stays wonderfully entangled.