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Astronomie en Astrofisika

Ons fokus op die koppeling van fundamentele fisika met astronomiese waarnemings om die fundamentele wette van die heelal te verstaan, en om die aard van donker materie en donker energie te ontrafel. 

In die besonder sluit ons aktiewe navorsingsrigtings die tydperk van reionisasie, ekstragalaktiese sterrekunde, die vroeë heelal, indirekte opsporing van donker materie, neutronsterre en swart gate in. 

Ons is betrokke by Suid-Afrika se MeerKAT, Square Kilometre Array (SKA), Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA) teleskope, LSST (Vera C. Rubin Observatory), FAST teleskoop en CMB Stage-4, en gebruik ook data van die Atacama Cosmology Telescope, South Pool Telescope, ESO se Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS), en Dark Energy Survey Instrument (DESI).

Navorsing

Navorsingsfokusareas
  • Radio-astronomie: Epok van Reionisasie, Donker Materie-soektog in radiogolflengte, Pulsar-tydsberekeningsskikking, 21-cm Intensiteitskartering
  • Ekstragalaktiese Sterrekunde: sterrestelsel-eienaardige snelheidsveld, termiese en kinetiese Sunyaev-Zel’dovich-effek, dinamika van plaaslike groepe, nabye-veld-kosmologie
  • Teoretiese Kosmologie: die kosmiese mikrogolfagtergrondstraling, waarnemingstoetse van inflasie, swaartekragteorieë
Huidige projekte
Institusionele samewerking

The Kapetyn Astronomical Institute, University of Groningen, Netherlands

Samewerkers
  • Prof Rene Breton, The University of Manchester
  • Prof Xuelei Chen, National Astronomical Observatory, China
  • Prof Clive Dickinson, The University of Manchester
  • Prof Yu Gao, Institute of High Energy Physics
  • Prof Hongjian He, Shanghai JiaoTong University
  • Prof Di Li, National Astronomical Observatory, China
  • Prof Douglas Scott, University of British Columbia
  • Prof Aaron Parsons, University of California at Berkeley
  • Prof Denis Tramonte, Xian-JiaoTong Liverpool University
  • Prof Ludovic Van Waerbeke, University of British Columbia
  • Prof Amanda Weltman, University of Cape Town
  • Prof Qiang Yuan, Purple Mountain Observatory

Navorsingsgroep

YinZheMa
Professor Yin-Zhe Ma (PhD: Universiteit van Cambridge (2011)
Theoretical Astrophysics, Cosmology and Radio Astronomy
Professor en navorsingsgroepleier
+27 21 808 3372
1003 Merensky Gebou
Steven
Dr Steven Murray (PhD: Universiteit van Wes-Australië (2017))
21cm Cosmology and Radio Astronomy, Cosmological Structure Formation, Astrostatistics and Bayesian Modelling, Open-source Software Tools
Senior Lecturer
1018 Merensky Gebou
AnslynJohn
Dr Anslyn John (PhD: Universiteit van KwaZulu-Natal (2012))
General Relativity, Theoretical cosmology, Relativistic Astrophysics
Lecturer
+27 21 808 3371
1028 Merensky Gebou
Rob-Adam
Dr Rob Adam (PhD: Universiteit van Suid-Afrika (1991))
Radio Astronomy, Nuclear Physics
Honorary Professor
Charles_Takalana_6
Dr Charles Takalana (PhD: Universiteit van die Witwatersrand (2020))
21-cm Cosmology, Astronomy Development and Policies
Extraordinary Lecturer
MichaelSarkis
Dr Michael Sarkis (PhD: Universiteit van die Witwatersrand (2023))
Dark Matter, Pulsar Timing Array
Nadoktorale genoot
Jelte
Mr Jelte Bottema
Utilizing the new realm of machine learning to gain deeper insights into the evolution of the Universe.
PhD student
PhillipBadenhorst
Mr Phillip Badenhorst
Dark Matter, Neutron Stars
PhD Student
JaymieVanDerMerwe
Mr Jaymie Van der Merwe
Numerical simulations of the large-scale structure
PhD Student
ziyan_3
Mr Ziyan Yuwen (Left) and Ms Yuer Jiang (Right)
Pulsar Timing Array (Left) and 21-Cosmology (Right)
Exchange
guifan
Mr Guifan Pan
Thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect and Superradiance
PhD Student
Bram
Mr Bram Alferink
Cosmology and Large-Scale Structure of the Universe
PhD Student
Koustav-Konar
Mr Koustav Konar
Fast Radio Bursts and Large-Scale Structure of the Universe
PhD Student
Fatima-Saiyed
Ms Fatima Saiyed
21-cm Cosmology and Cosmic Structure Formation
PhD Student
Luan.
Mr Luan van Loggenberg
Black Holes and Cosmic Censorship
MSc student
Hemanth
Mr Hemanth Potluri
21-cm Cosmology and Large-Scale structure
PhD Student
Riyaadh
Mr Riyaadh Jamodien
General relativity, Bayesian analysis, and multi-resolution analysis.
PhD Student

Media gallery

We are involved in the US-SA collaboration project “Hydrogen Epoch Reionization Array” (HERA) which measures the high-redshift 21-cm signal with radio interferometry technique.
Image by: National Research Foundation

Ons is betrokke by die VSA-SA samewerkingsprojek "Hydrogen Epoch Reionization Array" (HERA) wat die hoë-rooiverskuiwing 21-cm sein met radio-interferometrie tegniek meet.

cosmic evo

Die kosmiese evolusie van 13.7 miljard jaar is die hoofnavorsingsdoelwit van ons navorsing.

output

Ons gebruik die Kosmiese mikrogolfagtergrondstraling (KMB) van Planck en KMB-S4 om die aanvanklike toestand van die heelal te verstaan.

SA_SKA

Ons is betrokke by die MeerKAT en Square Kilometer Array (SKA) projek.

Intreeredes

Prof Yin-Zhe Ma

Mediadekking

CGTN onderhoud met prof Yin-Zhe Ma, 183de Nobel Symposium Outreach Talk, Universiteit van die Wes-Kaap, Oktober 2022

Watch CGTN interviews Prof Yin-Zhe Ma (UKZN) at the Nobel Symposium Outreach Talk ... on YouTube.

"Searching for Axion Dark Matter" —NITheCS seminaar

“Echoes of the Skies”, SKA projek

Watch Faces of Africa - Echoes of The Skies on YouTube.

NItheCS seminaar - dr. Anslyn John

Watch 2024-04-29: NITheCS Colloquium: 'Cosmology with viscous dark matter' by Dr Anslyn John.. on YouTube.

Onlangse navorsingshoogtepunte

1. Examination of cosmic-ray electrons with solar gamma rays

TeV-range cosmic ray electrons and positrons (CREs) have been directly observed in quests to uncover new physics or unidentified astrophysical origins. These CREs possess the capability to elevate solar photons’ energies into gamma ray ranges through inverse-Compton scattering. In Yang et al. (2023), we investigate the prospective augmentation of the inverse Compton emission spectrum due to a potential surplus of CREs. The diagram illustrates the plausible signal (depicted by residual black lines) within the solar gamma ray spectrum incorporating the CRE surplus. This surplus signal can be examined through extensive observations utilizing water Cherenkov telescopes.

yang

2. Detection of the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect (ISW) and thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect cross-correlations

The Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect refers to the redshift or blueshift experienced by cosmic microwave background photons due to the evolving gravitational potential, which, in principle, is correlated with thermal gas on large scales. In Ibitoye et al. (2024), we successfully detected this phenomenon using Planck data with a confidence level of 3.6 sigma. The left panel illustrates the real SZ-ISW correlated power spectrum alongside 100 simulations represented by colored curves, while the right panel displays the signal-to-noise ratio of the genuine SZ-ISW correlation compared to the 100 simulations. Additionally, we employed the cross-correlation power spectrum, as well as tSZ and ISW auto-spectra, to constrain cosmological parameters, yielding intriguing results concerning parameters such as H_0 and S_8. For further elaboration, interested readers are encouraged to consult Ibitoye et al. (2024).

 

Ibitoye

3. Cosmic web’s contribution to FRB’s dispersion measure (DM)

In Walker et al. (2024), we utilized the cosmological simulation “IllustrisTNG” to investigate the dispersion measures (DMs) of fast radio bursts (FRBs) accumulated as they traverse various types of large-scale structure (LSS). Along randomly selected sightlines, we pinpointed halos, filaments, voids, and collapsed structures and computed their respective contributions to DM. As depicted in the right panel, our analysis revealed that filamentary structures predominantly contribute to DM, increasing from approximately 71% to about 80% on average for FRBs for redshift range [0.1, 5]. Conversely, the contribution from halos decreases, while the contribution from voids remains relatively constant, fluctuating within approximately 1%. The primary source of DM variability among sightlines stems from halo and filamentary environments, suggesting that sightlines traversing voids exclusively could serve as more accurate probes for cosmological parameters.

Walker

Met erkenning

NRF
NITheCS
sarao
SU

Loopbaan- en studiemoontlikhede

One Postdoctoral Fellow For 2025-2027

Astrophysics Research Group, Stellenbosch University

DEADLINE: 30th April 2025

The Astrophysics Research Group within the Department of Physics at Stellenbosch University invites applications for a postdoctoral fellowship, commencing in June 2025 or shortly thereafter. Established in 2023, the group comprises approximately 20 full-time researchers and is engaged in cutting-edge investigations across astrophysics and cosmology. Key research areas include the epoch of reionization, cosmic microwave background (CMB) studies, galaxy surveys and large-scale structures, neutron stars and black holes, and the indirect detection of dark matter.

The group plays a central role in South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope, the MeerKAT Extended Array, and the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA). It also maintains formal collaborations with international projects such as the LSST (Vera C. Rubin Observatory), the SKA Science Working Groups, FAST, and the CMB Stage-4 survey in the United States. Additionally, the group has established a strategic partnership with the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute at Groningen University, with seven jointly supervised PhD students starting in 2025. Further collaborations extend to Stellenbosch University’s Faculty of Engineering and the School for Data Science, leveraging expertise in radio antenna technology and advanced big-data analytics. More details are available at: https://www.su.ac.za/en/faculties/science/department/physics/astro

Given the group’s involvement in these experiments, preference for this fellowship will be given to candidates with experience in any of the following areas: low-frequency radio data analysis, pulsar-timing arrays, CMB data analysis, galaxy surveys, or weak gravitational lensing.

BURSARY VALUES and DURATION: The fellowship is ZAR 320 000 (tax-free) per annum for two year (24 months), supplemented with a once-off relocation coverage, a once-off equipment grant and a limited travel allowance.

MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Ph.D. in astronomy, physics, or a related field (graduated within the last 5 years). Significant computational and data analysis skills are preferred.

APPLICATIONS: Please send a single PDF document to Professor Yin-Zhe Ma ([email protected]) by the closing date containing the:

  • Your CV and Publication List.
  • Degree Certificates
  • A 3-page statement describing the previous/current research and future plan
  • Names and Email addresses for 2-3 referees.
     

Applicants should also arrange for the 2 or 3 reference letters to be sent directly to Prof. Ma by the same closing date. An incomplete application will not be accepted.

Postdoctoral fellows are not appointed as employees and as their fellowships are awarded tax-free, they are not eligible for employee benefits. Stellenbosch University reserves the right NOT to make an appointment if suitable candidates do not apply.

INQUIRIES: Please contact Professor Yin-Zhe Ma ([email protected])