Copenhagen based student from DTU, Sander Linde, is one of the youngest at the institution to become an award-winning physicist at just 22 years old. He recently completed his bachelor’s degree in nanophysics and now studies a master’s in engineering physics at DTU in Copenhagen.
Written by: Johannes Hagelsø

He attended TPW Zurich, a highly renowned physics workshop in Austria. It was here that he and his co-worker won the award for best poster on their software for quantative analysis. Heidelberg Instruments Nano – hosts of the award-show – wrote on LinkedIn:
“The day concluded with the “Best Poster Award,” which went to Magnus Vejby Nielsen and Sander Linde for their innovative and user-friendly software “FunFit,” ideal for bitmap generation and quantitative analysis of smooth topographic landscapes.”
Sander now has a springboard — either toward academic career or entrepreneurship: “We will continue improving FunFit, adding more features and refine the user interface based on feedback from the event. It’s still a prototype, but we are pushing it toward a more polished release, perhaps for commercialization in the future, but not now.”
Sander is now looking forward to finishing his master’s degree, where studying abroad in South Korea as well as going to a university his professor and he was invited to in China is a part of his plans soon.
The target audience is academics, physicists, students and professors in geoscience and other software developers. Or just people who are generally interested in tech. Ideal websites to publish on would be DTU’s own website to promote their students, as well as Nature.com.