Professor Ewa M. Goldys Deputy Director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Nanoscale Biophotonics at Macquarie University Syndey, Australia, jointly set up with the University of Adelaide and RMIT (see www.cnbp.org.au).
Professor Goldys attractedover $60,000,000 in external competitive research funding, also for interdisciplinary research. She has also been a long-term International Member of Photonics4Life, a key European consortium in Biophotonics.
Professor Goldys pioneered ultrasensitive analysis methods of non-invasive label-free characterisation for biology and health diagnostics. This characterisation is based upon the detection and quantification of various metabolites (free and bound NADH, flavins, A2E, lipofuscin, and cytochrome C). This patented approach provides a collective metabolic fingerprint” which can be used to distinguish healthy from diseased cells in a variety of disease conditions.
Professor Goldys made major contributions to fluorescent labelling, a key optical technique to characterise cells and tissues by characterising and developing applications of specialised fluorescent nanoparticles including the first successful demonstration of fluorescence upconversion in nanoparticles (2006) and a sequence of works concerned with optical characterisation of lanthanide-doped nanoparticles, including publications in Nature Nanotechnology (2013) and Nature Photonics (2014).
Professor Goldys is Fellow Optical Society (2010). The citation reads "For research leadership in optical characterisation and biomedical sensing that has promoted widespread interdisciplinary awareness of light in life sciences”. She received the prestigious Australian Museum 2016 ANSO Eureka Prize for Innovative Use of Technology.