Episode 14

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Published on:

2nd Mar 2023

Sandro Tacchella: an international journey through extragalactic astrophysics

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Joining us this month is Dr Sandro Tacchella, Assistant Professor in Extragalactic Astrophysics at the Cavendish and the nearby Kavli Institute for Cosmology. Inspired by astronomy at a young age, Sandro pursued a degree in Physics and threaded a line between the “small” scale of planetary astrophysics and the statistical world of pure cosmology. He looks at the physics underpinning the formation of galaxies and black holes, hoping to understand how these cosmic structures came to be using data from some of the most advanced telescopes on, and above, Earth. His experience of using analytical and cosmological models to determine the physical properties of galaxies is being brought to bear on data from the recently activated James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRCam instrument, and he plays a key role in projects aimed at characterising the earliest galaxies.

His research has taken him around the world, from Switzerland to Korea and the US, but he has still found time to start a family and maintain a healthy work-life balance. Today, we’ll talk to him about the benefits and unique problems he faces working in astrophysics, what it has been like to do cutting-edge research on three continents, and where he sees extragalactic astrophysics going in the near future.

[00:36] – Guest’s intro

[01:50] – Dreaming of space through a telescope

[03:57] – Physics degree and outreach events to become a budding astronomer

[05:03] – It's not so easy to do Astrophysics in Switzerland

[06:00] – From broad astrophysics to extragalactic observations

[08:17] – The exquisite images from the Hubble Space Telescope

[10:00] – Why do galaxies look like what they do today? Look at them back in time!

[12:17] – Live podcast announcement with special guest Professor Dame Athene Donald

[13:42] - Starting a family while doing a PhD

[16:35] – What counts when you try to succeed during a PhD are you don't get the support you need from your group?

[20:05] – There is work, and there is family...

[21:05] - Restarting a career at Harvard and working on the James Webb Telescope

[23:15] – From Harvard to Korea to the UK- two kids, a partner, a postdoc, and a pandemic

[26:35] - Analising the date from James Webb Telescope and understanding when the very first galaxies and black holes formed and how they evolved

[31:25] Astrophysics is famous for finding things that nobody was expecting

[33:46] – Outro  

Book ahead

  • Join us for a LIVE recording of the Poeple Doing Physics with special guest Professor Dame Athene Donald on Saturday 18th March at 3.30pm. Part of Cambridge event is part of the Cambridge Festival from the University of Cambridge.

Reserve your free spot now!

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Episode credits

  • Hosts: Simone Eizagirre Barker and Jacob Butler
  • Recording and Editing: Chris Brock


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About the Podcast

People doing Physics
The podcast exploring the personal side of physics
As fascinating as physics can be, it can also seem very abstract, but behind each experiment and discovery stands a real person trying to understand the universe. Join us at the Cavendish Laboratory on the first Thursday of every month as we get up close and personal with the researchers, technicians, students, teachers, and people that are the beating heart of Cambridge University’s Physics department. Each episode also covers the most exciting and up-to-date physics news coming out of our labs. If you want to know what goes on behind the doors of a Physics department, are curious to know how people get into physics, or simply wonder what physicists think and dream about, listen in!
Join us on Twitter @DeptofPhysics using the hashtag #PeopleDoingPhysics.

About your hosts

Vanessa Bismuth

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I'm the Cavendish's Communications Manager and I want the world to know about the extraordinary people that are working, researching and studying here.

Jacob Breward Butler

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Working in the Outreach Office of the Cavendish Laboratory, I run Cambridge University Physics' educational outreach programmes, helping young people from around the UK to see physics as a worthwhile endeavour.

Charles Walker

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As a researcher at Cavendish Astrophysics and Selwyn College, Cambridge, I help develop and use radio telescopes to learn more about the Universe, and perform outreach to help others learn more about our work, and us!