I am a postdoctoral fellow at the Astrophysics Group, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, as part of the Blavatnik Cambridge Postdoctoral Fellowship. I am currently working within Didier Queloz’s group. My research focuses on understanding stars in the Galactic context, with a particular emphasis on halo stars and galactic archaeology. I explore and search for exoplanets and binary stars in these stellar populations, contributing to our understanding of their formation and evolution.

In addition, I investigate dormant compact objects in binary systems, such as white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes, as well as compact hierarchical systems.

Previously, I was a research associate at Tel-Aviv University’s (TAU) Astrophysics Department, where I collaborated with Prof. Tsevi Mazeh on exoplanet and binary star research. My Ph.D. thesis, supervised by Prof. Shay Zucker, focused on characterising the demographics of exoplanets within the Galactic context.

As part of my role at TAU’s Nanosatellite and Space Engineering Centre, I also contributed as a system engineer in the development and integration of nanosatellites and space-based experiments sent to the International Space Station (ISS) and Low-Earth Orbit (LEO).