Yu’s work encompasses three areas of study:
biophysics,
condensed matter physics, and
quantum physics. In biophysics, Yu studies the intracellular transport of molecules using computer simulations. In developmental biology, she has used
Monte Carlo simulations, particularly to investigate the development of the wing disc in
Drosophila fruit flies and to study how, fundamentally, the organs and physical features of creatures emerge. Additionally, she has deployed statistical techniques like
maximum entropy to study
cancer immunotherapy, uncovering under what conditions immune cells infiltrate tumors. Along with this, she has been researching tumor microenvironments undergoing immunotherapy. In condensed matter physics, Yu specializes in disordered systems while she focuses especially on glasses, she has researched the glass transition, Coulomb glasses, dipolar glasses, spin glasses, and the low temperature properties of glasses. Additionally, she has collaborated research in low-temperature spin dynamics in LAFO thin films. Yu’s research in the field of quantum computation has explored how fluctuating electronic spins on the surface of Josephson junction
qubits can produce magnetic noise, leading to
decoherence of the qubit. == Honors and awards ==