Astrophysics & Space
Rachel Mandelbaum
Professor

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Program
LINCC Frameworks
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Institution
Carnegie Mellon University
Rachel Mandelbaum is a professor at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU). She earned her PhD in
physics from Princeton University, and was previously an associate research scholar and visiting
associate research scholar for the Department of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University,
and a Hubble Fellow for astrophysics at the Institute for Advanced Study. Her research interests
are predominantly in the areas of observational cosmology and galaxy studies that reveal the
nature of dark matter and dark energy, and the connection between dark matter and galaxies.
Her work includes the use of weak gravitational lensing and other analysis techniques, with
projects that range from the development of improved data analysis methods, to application of
such methods to existing data. In recent years she has dedicated significant effort towards the
development of open source software packages for astronomical simulation and data analysis.
Currently, Mandelbaum is involved in analysis of data from the Hyper-SuprimeCam (HSC) survey,
and is actively preparing for upcoming surveys including the Rubin Observatory LSST and the
Nancy Gracy Roman Space Telescope. Her work on LSST is carried out within the LSST Dark
Energy Science Collaboration and as co-lead of the LINCC Frameworks initiative. She has
received the AAS Annie Jump Cannon Prize, the Department of Energy Early Career Award, an
Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, a Simons Investigator Award, and was the Falco-DeBenedetti Career
Development Professor in Physics at CMU.