About me
I am currently a postdoctoral researcher in mathematics at NYU Courant. My supervisor is Roland Bauerschmidt. Before coming to Courant, I was a postdoc in the Statistical Laboratory at the University of Cambridge.
I obtained my PhD in 2023 from KTH, working under the supervision of Kurt Johansson, and my undergraduate/master’s degrees from the University of Melbourne.
Research Interests
My mathematical interests lie primarily in probability theory, mathematical physics and analysis. I have worked on the sine-Gordon field - a massive, non-conformal field theory and its relation to twisted Dirac operators, on dimer models and their height field fluctuations, connections to random matrices and correlation decay, and on fractional Dyson brownian motion. The sine-Gordon field theory has many connections to other models in probability theory, such as Coulomb gases, massive SLE and the Ising model. It has an expected exact mapping to the massive Thirring model, which one can use to conjecture (and in some cases prove) determinantal formulas for the correlations of several observables. See my publications for further details.
In my free time, I enjoy coding, cycling and running.
- Contact: sm12814 at nyu.edu
- Links: Google Scholar · LinkedIn