Georgina Fröhlich graduated from Eötvös Loránd University in Physics and Astronomy, then got her Ph.D. at Semmelweis University in brachytherapy physics. She works as a physicist at the Centre of Radiotherapy in the National Institute of Oncology. In addition, she has initiated the Medical Biophysics module at ELTE, currently lead by her, and she has been actively taking part in it as a lecturer. She also teaches medical students and doctors at Semmelweis University. Besides her clinical work, she plans clinical and dosimetric studies regularly, and performs their biostatistical analysis. Her main topics are brachytherapy dose optimisation, biological dose integration of combined external beam- and brachytherapy and deformable image registration. She has presented her results at several national and international conferences, and is a member of several international radiotherapy working groups (GEC-ESTRO Breast-, Gynaecologic and URO-GEC WGs). She supervises both undergraduate and Ph.D. students. Besides holding popular science lectures, she regularly takes part in organizing Researchers’ Night events, and also educates cancerous children on radiotherapy by using interactive tools such as a custom-built LEGO-bunker and a short film created specificly for this purpose. Her achievement was recognized with several prizes; the most significant ones are the Hungarian State Stipendium (ELTE), Resident Award (WCB), Prize for Best Junior Presentation (GEC-ESTRO-ISIORT), Talent Support Prominence Award, Kerpel Plaquette and Kerpel-Fronius Ödön Award (SE), János Bolyai Research Scholarship (MTA), Bolyai+ Young Lecturer and Researcher Scholarship (ÚNKP), Special prize – Ist and IInd Science Communication Competition (ELTE) and People’s choice award (best article) – Hungarian Oncology (MOT). She is a mother of three, and does triathlon and ultralong distance trail running in her free time.