I am a researcher in astrophysics with a strong focus on multi-messenger astronomy and the study of cosmic transients, including supernovae, kilonovae, and gamma-ray bursts. I earned my PhD in Physics from the University of Naples “Federico II,” where my dissertation explored the search for electromagnetic counterparts of gravitational wave sources and other unknown transient phenomena.
My career includes postdoctoral positions at the Astronomical Observatory of Rome (INAF-OAR) and the Space Science Data Center (SSDC-ASI), where I worked on multi-wavelength data analysis, transient classification, and observational strategies, often leveraging machine learning techniques.
Currently, I am a researcher at the University of Naples “Federico II”, contributing to the “National Centre for HPC, Big Data, and Quantum Computing” program. My responsibilities include configuring pipelines and databases to handle large-scale astronomical datasets.
I am an active member of several international collaborations, such as the Rubin Observatory Science Collaboration, the Einstein Telescope project, and ENGRAVE. My work spans data analysis and observational campaigns, all aimed at uncovering the nature of transient phenomena.
Driven by a passion for discovery, I continuously seek to push the boundaries of our understanding of the transient universe by combining innovative methodologies with advanced computational tools.