Anne-Christine Davis is a British theoretical physicist at the University of Cambridge.
Davis was a graduate student at Bristol University, under the supervision of W. Noel Cottingham.
[1] Following postdoctoral positions at Durham University and Imperial College London, Davis worked overseas at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland (where she became the first female theoretician)[2] and at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
When I first started school, the teacher put flash cards up: A is for apple, B is for banana, C is for I can't remember what, to teach us all the alphabet.
And the teacher picked this up, that I had learnt my alphabet first time round, and gave me a bucket of water and a pipette to play with.