Postdoctoral Researcher in Astrophysics, Swinburne University of Technology
I graduated Monash University with a Bachelor of Aerospace Engineering (Honours) and a Bachelor of Science. Following this, I went on to complete a PhD in Astrophysics at Swinburne University of Technology.
Since then, I've been working as a postdoctoral researcher for OzGrav and Swinburne University. My scientific background specialises in pulsar timing array science. This science uses pulsars, regularly rotating neutron stars that hit the Earth with beams of radio waves, as very precise natural clocks. By doing this, we can look for distinct patterns in how space and time are changing across the entire galaxy - in effect creating a cosmic scale gravitational wave detector. The gravitational waves that this kind of detector would be sensitive to are those emitted by inspiralling supermassive black holes, the behemoths of our Universe that reside at the centres of galaxies and are billions of times heavier than our Sun.