Bhavesh Rajpoot

Bhavesh Rajpoot is currently engaged in research at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy and the University of Stuttgart, focusing on spatially resolving star formation in galaxies and participating in the KOOL project for adaptive optics testing for the Extremely Large Telescope. Bhavesh has held various roles in academic settings, including Teaching Assistant at Landessternwarte Heidelberg and Graduate Student at Heidelberg University. Previous experience includes research in computational astrophysics at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, and participation in outreach and educational initiatives at Haus der Astronomie. Bhavesh holds a Master of Science in Astronomy and Astrophysics from Heidelberg University and a Bachelor of Science in Physics from Fergusson College.

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Heidelberg, Germany

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Max Planck Institute for Astronomy

How did our home planet form? Are planets like our Earth exceptionally rare or quite common? What information can we glean from the more than thousand planets around other stars astronomers have found in the past decades? How can we detect earth-like planets around distant stars? And how might we find out whether or not they harbor life? How do stars form, and what is needed to make a star? How do the cradles of the stars - the molecular clouds - form out of the more diffuse interstellar medium? On a larger scale, what about our wider cosmic environment - how did our home galaxy, the Milky Way, come into existence? More generally, how do all the different types of galaxies form? And what makes some galaxies produce more stars than others? These fundamental questions about our origins, the evolution of our cosmic environment and, more generally, our place in the cosmos are what drives research at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy. In our quest for answers, we use, and help build some of the most advanced observational tools available - ground-based as well as space telescopes. We also simulate the formation and evolution of stars, planets, and galaxies and conduct laboratory experiments on the foundations of astrophysical processes.


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201-500

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