About me
I’m a postdoctoral fellow with the Neutrino Network Fellowship at the Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics, New York University, working with Prof. Glennys Farrar.
My research is mainly focused on investigating the role of astrophysical neutrinos inside various stars, constraining astrophysical parameters, and discovering new physics with the neutrino signal from those sources.
Previously, I was a fellow with the Network for Neutrinos, Nuclear Astrophysics and Symmetries (N3AS) Physics Frontier Center based at UC Berkeley. Within that fellowship, I spent 2 years at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, with Prof. Baha Balantekin, and 1 year at the University of California, San Diego, working with Prof. George Fuller. I completed my PhD at the Niels Bohr Institute of the University of Copenhagen in the fall of 2021, working on neutrino astrophysics with Prof. Irene Tamborra. I got my master’s degree in Physics at the University of Copenhagen in July 2018. My thesis was focused on the diffuse supernova neutrino background. In 2016, I obtained an engineering degree in Technical Physics at the AGH University of Science and Technology in Krakow. You can find more information in my CV.
You can find short and easy-to-digest summaries of some of my works at the N3AS website:
- Can diffuse supernova neutrino background detection reveal sterile neutrino secrets?
- Quantifying Nuclear Structure Uncertainties in Dark Matter Direct Detection Experiments
- Signatures of the quark-hadron phase transition at neutrino detectors
- Towards probing the diffuse supernova neutrino background in all flavors