Summary
Doğa Veske is an assistant professor and multi-messenger astrophysicist with a decade of experience combining gravitational-wave observations, high-energy neutrino searches, and particle-physics training to probe compact-object formation and fundamental physics. Her PhD and postdoctoral work produced novel statistical methods for efficient joint GW–neutrino searches and unmodelled population inferences, and she co-led LIGO/Virgo–IceCube/ANTARES joint-event analyses. She has constrained dynamical binary-black-hole formation channels using GW catalogs, investigated observational biases in detections, and pursued diverse projects from microlensing searches in globular clusters to terrestrial GR tests with GW detectors. Trained also as an electrical engineer, she built a proton-beam measurement and readout system still used for space-radiation testing in Turkey, reflecting a rare blend of experimental instrumentation and data-driven astrophysics.
10 years of coding experience
11 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science - BS, Physics-Advanced Program, Bachelor of Science - BS, Physics-Advanced Program at Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Physics, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Physics at Columbia University in the City of New York
Turkish, English, German