McMaster's Sidwewalk Astronomy
For six years I helped run telescope observing sessions on and near campus for the general public, and for four years I was the manager of the group.
Research Assistant
Physics & Astronomy
McMaster University
I am a recent PhD graduate from the Department of Physics & Astronomy at McMaster University under the supervision of Dr. Christine D. Wilson. I am currently working part-time as a research assistant with Dr. Wilson and searching for work outside academia in data science. My astronomical research focuses on star formation and the interstellar medium within vigorously star-forming regions of nearby galaxies. I am particularly interested in understanding the gas properties within galaxy mergers that lead to their extremely high rates of star formation. My observational research has been in the submillimeter and radio parts of the spectrum. I have worked primarily with ALMA data, both archival and from my own successfully observed project.
Here is an ADS link to my publications. My Master's thesis focused on building a clump mass function in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using ALMA 1.3 and 3.2 mm continuum observations to measure dust masses in star-forming regions. We mined the ALMA public archive for high-resolution data on several regions in the LMC, and we supplemented these data with short-spacing measurements acquired with new ALMA observations in which I was the P.I.
My PhD thesis focused on measuring the molecular-gas properties in nearby merging galaxies, with high-resolution ALMA observations at typical GMC scales, for comparison with local spiral galaxies. We used both pixel-by-pixel and cloud-finding analyses to statistically characterize cloud masses, sizes, mass surface densities, velocity dispersions, gas temperatures, etc.
We are also extending my Master's work in the LMC using the spectroscopic ALMA observations that were part of my P.I. project to measure the molecular gas temperatures and densities on clump scales. This will allow us to explore the impact young massive clusters have on the gas in their local environment.
I was a physics teaching assistant in four courses nearly every year from 2015 through 2021 while I was a graduate student at McMaster University. A few courses are highlighted below.
Beyond research I have been participating in regular public outreach events at McMaster since I started graduate school in 2015.
For six years I helped run telescope observing sessions on and near campus for the general public, and for four years I was the manager of the group.
Over four years I gave presentations on topics ranging from general introductions to astronomy, tours of the solar system, astronomy done with current and upcoming space telescopes, and more.
I volunteered as a merit judge for the 2020 and 2021 fairs, reviewing students' projects and providing feedback.
The best way to get a hold of me is through email.