Research interests
Life and explosive death of massive stars
The origin of the elements
Nuclear astrophysics
Current work comprises the study of massive to supermassive stars (10-100,000 solar masses); the first generations of stars in the universe (Pop III stars); evolution of rotating massive stars and the spin of their remnants (including predictions for GW sources); mixing and transport processes in the stellar interior; nucleosynthesis and the origin of elements, including galacto-chemical evolution - which elements are made where and when; supernovae (mechanisms and nucleosynthesis); gamma-ray bursts (collapsars and similar models) and their progenitors; modeling of Type I X-ray bursts and superbursts (thermonuclear explosions on the surface of neutron stars); stellar rotation of misaligned systems (internal rotation evolution, binary and mutile stars dynamics and interaction).
Biography
Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University, 2015 -
Professor, School of Mathematical Sciences, Monash University, 2012 - 2014.
Associate Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy, Univeristy of Minnesota, 2008-2012.
Technical Staff Member, Theoretcial Astrophysics Group (T-6), Theory Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, 2003-2008.
Fellow, Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago, 2001-2003.
Alexander von Humboldt Feodor Lynen Fellow, Department of Astronomy, The University of Califrnia at Santa Cruz, 1998-2001.
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Dr. rer. nat. (TUM), 1995-1998.
Physics Diploma, TUM, 1989-1995.
Supervision interests
PosDoc, PhD, Masters, Honours, Undergraduate Research (e.g., PHS2350, PHS3350), and Summer Vacation Scholar Projects in the areas above.
Consulting
Happy to help with problems related to Python and numerical applications (Numpy).
External positions
Guest Professor, Tsung-Dao Lee Institute
1 Jan 2018 → 31 Dec 2020
Guest Professor, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
1 Jan 2015 → 31 Jan 2020
Research area keywords