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About me

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Astro Life

As a kid I hesitated for a while between several career plans. I wasn't sure whether I'd become an astrophysicist, an astronaut or  a detective. It seems life selected the safest option, to the relief of my family! My Astro research journey began in 2011 at UC Berkeley, during a short master internship, where I was introduced to dark matter density field reconstruction from convergence maps  by Alexie Leauthaud. But it is really in France, my home country, at Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris, that I could finally merge my childish fascination for vortical flows with astrophysical investigations, and then my passion really took off. I completed my PhD with Christophe Pichon, Yohan Dubois and Julien Devriendt, who trained me in galaxy evolution from a theoretical and numerical perspective. In particular, I used large cosmological simulations to study how galaxies evolve their morphology and spin through mergers and gas accretion, under the influence of cosmic filaments.

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I then proceeded to tour the world on a postdoc spree, with successive fellowships at ICRAR in Australia, McMaster University in Canada and Johns Hopkins University in the United States. Aside from my primary goal of meeting face-to-face with kangaroos, moose and bears, I discovered fantastic communities of observers and theorists living in symbiosis under the night sky. They introduced me to the power and beauty of integral-field spectroscopy and radio-astronomy. There, I discovered the exhilarating feeling of preparing for upcoming missions on the new instruments that set the heartbeat of global astronomy, from Hector to the SKA to JWST, and waiting eagerly for these new windows onto the Universe to open! 

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On the way, I also realized how much I enjoy mentoring students on research projects. In my mind, Astronomy stands out as the playground of science. I love this idea and the freedom that comes with it! But it also makes for a field of low human stakes.  Student mentorship really brings to it to the next level by giving me the extra meaning and sense of purpose that I need  to keep tackling complex problems and strive for new discoveries. In pursuit of this calling, I finally moved to New York in 2022 and joined the faculty at CUNY to start my own research group, GothamWeb. 

Light mode

When I am not daydreaming about galaxy evolution, I enjoy spending time in nature and camping in the wild with my wife Amandine and my dog Saka. In the evening, you may find us sleeping under a mosquito net or rearranging some unpractical vehicle into our own habitable planet. In the (late) morning, I'll most likely be in the hammock reading some book about language, anthropology or animal cognition (yeah, orcas! Go octopi!)... or just a good murder mystery (the detective thing again...) . The header picture is from one of our steepest hikes ever, in Maine. And while we cursed  the poor soul that suggested this "hidden gem" to us all along the way, I hope you can appreciate it was well worth the pain!

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When in the City, I enjoy arts, crafts and in particular theatrical performances... which are kind of an all-in-one art form, right? I started wandering into the wonderful world of staging and acting as an undergraduate, from the safety and comfort of theory (as always). It took me five more years to finally start co-designing sets and step onto a stage in front a real audience. Even if they are now far away from me, big shout out to my first troup, still so close to my heart, the Australia based, plurilingual Perth French Theatre, led by the amazing Stella. I long to replicate in New York what I had back then, an international group of actors who see diverse accents as a strength and not a flaw. It's also with them that I started merging science and theatrical experiences through immersive workshops. If you are a student in Technology&Design, Science Comm or Theatre, please reach out!

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