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use imaging surveys at X-ray, optical, infrared and radio wavelengths to measure the emission from stars, active galactic nuclei, warm dust, atomic hydrogen and relativistic electrons. Spectroscopic
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Conventional x-ray imaging is firmly established as an invaluable tool in medicine, security, research and manufacturing. However, conventional methods extract only a fraction of the sample
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(betterbrains.org.au), a senior scientist at the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) study, and a Chief Investigator on an NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence. Her primary research interests are in
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I supervise computational projects in electron microscopy imaging for investigating materials at atomic resolution. Some projects centre on analysing experimental data acquired by experimental
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research impact on a breadth of photonic applications, including optical and quantum imaging, communications, displays, and sensing. I supervise a broad range of projects in nanophotonics. As a subgroup
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for examining and imaging the magnetic fields from exotic conducting materials (e.g. superconductors, topological insulators), performing high bandwidth and high sensitivity vector magnetic sensing and developing
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nucleosynthesis in violent episodes suffered by ancient stars" (with Dr Carolyn Doherty) "Applying 3D stellar hydrodynamics findings to 1D stellar codes: Improving the modelling of convection in stars" web page
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Digital Sky Survey" "Data-driven methods for stellar spectroscopy" "Chemical abundances in star clusters using Korg, the first spectral synthesis code developed in two decades" web page For further details