LSST Team Awards
Early Science with the LSST Team Awards
Goal: to advance the foundational science needed to realize the full potential of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s upcoming Legacy Survey of Space and Time.
Team Awards 2024
Wenbin Lu, Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley
Ana Bonaca, Carnegie Observatories, Carnegie Institution for Science
Kareem El-Badry, Astronomy, California Institute of Technology
IMBH in the LMC? A Hypervelocity Star Survey with LSST
Allison Strom, Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
Ben Margalit, Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Adam Miller, Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
Not So Heavy Metal: An Enhanced Rate of SLSNe at Cosmic Noon
Kareem El-Badry, Astronomy, California Institute of Technology
Caroline Morley, Astronomy, University of Texas at Austin
White Dwarf Companions as Brown Dwarf Chronometers
Igor Andreoni, Physics and Astronomy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Tanmoy Laskar, Physics & Astronomy, University of Utah
Mathew Madhavacheril, Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
Rubin LSST as a Multi-Wavelength Discovery Engine for Relativistic Transients
Alexander Ji, Astronomy & Astrophysics, University of Chicago
Vera Gluscevic, Physics and Astronomy, University of Southern California
A Unified Model of Stellar Systems in LSST-Y1 for Dark Matter Inference
Anna Ho, Astronomy, Cornell University
Maya Fishbach, Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Toronto
Elisabeth Newton, Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College
Multimessenger Transients in AGN Disks
Charlotte Christensen, Physics, Grinnell College
Nora Shipp, Astronomy, University of Washington
Burçin Mutlu-Pakdil, Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College
Dwarf Debris and Dark Matter: Searching for Evidence of Hierarchical Formation in the Stellar Halos of Dwarf Galaxies
Krista Smith, Physics and Astronomy, Texas A&M University
Adi Foord, Physics, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Towards a Census of Dual AGN Across Cosmic Time