Hi, I'm Dom!
PhD Researcher in Astronomy and Astrophysics
at Durham University, UK, studying Gas Dynamics
in High-Redshift Galaxies
(KMOS+ALMA Observations of Submillimetre Sources)
An investigation into the dynamics of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) —
dusty, star-forming galaxies at cosmic noon (10 billion years ago!) —
to provide insight into their evolutionary connection to other galaxy populations.
Observations from the KMOS IFU on the VLT in Chile have enabled us to measure redshifts for a statistically significant sample of ALMA-identified submillimetre galaxies. We will be able to determine clustering strengths, halo masses, and starburst lifetimes.
An investigation into the shape of the CO spectral line energy distributions
Unresolved mid-J and high-J ALMA CO observations of 12 luminous SMGs show that CO excitation in star-forming galaxies generally correlates with the star-formation rate surface density, but with significant scatter indicative of intrinsic ISM variations. These variations could arise due to heating by cosmic rays or turbulence.
Searching for X-ray selected, optically varying AGN using XMM-Newton and SDSS
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) exhibit variations in their X-ray and optical properties in addition to those caused by geometry. Using decades-worth of stacked images from XMM-Newton and spectroscopy from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), we can find new changing-look AGN (CLAGN).
Here are three steps that summarise how we take Astrophysical data and use it to learn about the Universe!
We collect observational data using ground or space-based telescopes
We apply fits to spectroscopic observations to measure gas dynamics and infer formation mechanisms
We distil the information for publications to help build a better picture of how galaxies form and evolve