Anne Burnham
Astronomy Graduate Student
at Yale University
I am an Astronomy graduate student at Yale University working with Dr. Meg Urry on obscured Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) at high redshift. Previously, I worked with Dr. Caitlin Casey at the University of Texas at Austin on dust temperature in high-redshift Dusty Star Forming Galaxies. My study focused on correlations between galaxy dust temperature and other observable physical characteristics. See my first author paper here.
Publications
- Burnham, A.D., Casey, C.M., Zavala, J.A., Manning, S., Spilker, J.S., Capak, P., Chapman, S.C., Chen, C.-C., Cooray, A., Hayward, C., Sanders, D.B., Scoville, N.Z., Sheth, K. “The Physical Drivers of the Luminosity-Weighted Dust Temperatures in High-Redshift Galaxies” Submitted to ApJ in December 2019. View here.
- Drew, P., Casey, C.M., Simons, R., Hung, C.-L., Kassin, S., Burnham, A.D. “Evidence of a Flat Outer Rotation Curve in a Starbursting Disk Galaxy at z = 1.6” 2018 ApJ 869, 58
- Jimenez-Andrade, E.F., Zavala, J.A., Burnham, A.D., et al. “The Redshift and Star Formation Mode of AzTEC2: A Pair of Massive Galaxies at z = 4.63” 2020 ApJ 890, 171
CV
View my CV here.