Researcher

Keywords

Fields of Research (FoR)

Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy, Galactic astronomy

Biography

Jesse (he/him) is a Lecturer in Astrophysics at the School of Physics, and also serves as Culture Director for the School. He is the Principal Investigator and Lead of GECKOS, a VLT/MUSE large program surveying 36 edge-on galaxies with masses similar to the Milky Way. He is passionate about sharing knowledge, mentoring students and early career researchers, and enjoys lecturing and public speaking.

His research focuses on understanding how the...view more

Jesse (he/him) is a Lecturer in Astrophysics at the School of Physics, and also serves as Culture Director for the School. He is the Principal Investigator and Lead of GECKOS, a VLT/MUSE large program surveying 36 edge-on galaxies with masses similar to the Milky Way. He is passionate about sharing knowledge, mentoring students and early career researchers, and enjoys lecturing and public speaking.

His research focuses on understanding how the Milky Way and more massive galaxies form, evolve, and cease forming stars. He has expertise in utilising integral field and near-infrared spectroscopic data to determine the stellar kinematic properties of galaxies. He is currently involved in several major galaxy surveys. Within the SAMI and Hector Galaxy Survey teams, he leads the stellar kinematics working groups. He also works on intermediate and high-redshift galaxies at z = 1–2 using MUSE, X-Shooter, and VIMOS on the VLT, and is a member of the MAGPI and LEGA-C surveys. Recently, he has been studying the dynamics and stellar populations of Milky Way analogues with VLT/MUSE and organised the conference Linking the Galactic and Extragalactic.

Jesse obtained his PhD in 2014 from Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, with a thesis titled Dawn of the Red and Dead: Stellar Kinematics of Massive Quiescent Galaxies out to z = 2. From 2015 to 2020 he worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher with Joss Bland-Hawthorn at the Sydney Institute for Astronomy. In 2020 he was awarded an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) Fellowship. In 2024 he joined the School of Physics at the University of New South Wales as a Lecturer in Astrophysics.

More information about his research and interests is available on his website.


My Grants

ADACS Merit Allocation Program  - Software development
ASTRO3D - distinguished visitor grant
The Hunstead Fund for Astrophysics - visitor grant
ASTRO3D - conference grant
The Hunstead Fund for Astrophysics - conference grant
AAL - Keck Observing travel funding
Leids Kerkhoven-Bosscha (LKBF) - travel grants
Leids Universiteits Fonds (LUF) - 1st price best travel story
Leids Universiteits Fonds (LUF) - international travel grant


My Awards

2020-2022 ARC - Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA)


My Research Activities

1) GECKOS (https://www.geckos.org.au/) is an IFS survey of 35 nearby edge-on Milky Way-like galaxies, going out to larger radius, deeper, and with higher spatial resolution than existing IFS nearby galaxy surveys. I am the Principal Investigator of the GECKOS ESO VLT/MUSE large program, and also lead the GECKOS team. The main goal of the survey is to determine the interplay between internal and external processes that shape disk galaxies with similar mass as our Galaxy.

2) The SAMI Galaxy Survey successfully created a large 3D integral-field spectroscopic dataset of 3000 galaxies across a large range of mass and environment. Since 2016 I have been leading the stellar kinematic workgroup producing high-quality stellar kinematic data products. My most recent work answered one of the fundamental questions from the SAMI science case: how do mass and environment impact the kinematic properties of galaxies?

3) Hector is the next major dark-time instrument for the AAT and is a multi-object integral-field-unit spectrograph aimed at obtaining a low-redshift galaxy survey of up to 15,000 galaxies. Within the Hector Galaxy Survey I have been leading the stellar kinematic working group. Due to its spectral resolution, Hector will revolutionise our ability to measure higher-order kinematic signatures that offer a complementary yet unique insight into the orbital structure of galaxies.

 

 


My Research Supervision


Areas of supervision

Available research projects focus on understanding how our Milky Way and more massive galaxies form, evolve, and die. I am looking for students who are interested in analysing imaging and spectroscopic data to understand the internal stellar structures of galaxies. My research group uses data from the VLT and AAT, and specialises in analysing integral field or hyperspectral imaging data.

If you are interested in doing a research project, please send an email describing your research experience with astronomy, your motivation, and a CV plus a transcript.


Currently supervising

I am (co)supervising five PhD students:

Michelle Ding - UNSW
Livia Casagrande - UNSW
Kaya Tengiz - UNSW

Susie Tuntipong - University of Sydney - Submitted
Tomas Rutherford - University of Sydney - Submitted

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Location

Rm 127
Level 1
Old Main Building
School of Physics