I did my PhD in radio astronomy, linking up different radio telescopes around the world to look into the hearts of galaxies at cosmological distances, to see what is happening very close to the supermassive black holes that live in the galaxies. I still do this work and have a research team of about ten people working in this field.
However, over the last ten years I’ve branched out into lots of other different areas. Most of my work is aimed at helping to design and build the Square Kilometre Array (SKA: http://www.skatelescope.org), a multi-billion dollar instrument that will be able to see all the way back in time to the Big Bang.
I’m Director of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA: http://facebook.com/Murchison.Widefield.Array), an SKA prototype that costs $50m and is currently being built in Western Australia. The MWA works at low radio frequencies and will blaze a trail for SKA science. I’ve gotten very interested in searching for powerful millsecond explosions in the Universe, which might tell us a lot about the material in the Universe that exists between galaxies.
To do all of these experiments I use existing telescopes in Australia, Europe, China, Japan, the US, and South Africa. A lot of the time these days, I’m coming up with ideas that existing telescopes can’t be used for, so I’ve become an instrumental scientist as well, designing and building special-purpose telescopes to do some of these experiments.
I supervise a team of about 50 researchers, about 10 of which are PhD students. I therefore have a lot of administrative and management work to do. I would estimate that I spend about 40 – 60% of my time in management and administration and the rest in research – sometimes it is a fuzzy line. However, I make up for it by working about 80 hours a week, on average. I travel around Australia and internationally about 25 – 30% of my time, depending what is going on in my various projects. I collaborate and work with dozens of people around the world. You can see where I am and what I’m doing by friending me on Facebook (I’m a bit of a Facebook fan): http://www.facebook.com/steven.tingay.