Research output per year
Research output per year
Accepting PhD Students
PhD projects
Mathematical and Theoretical Astrophysics
My research interests centre on the dynamics of stellar systems.
From an applied mathematics viewpoint, I am interested in a number of topics broadly connected to the classical gravitational N-body problem, especially Vlasov-Poisson equilibria and related perturbation and asymptotic methods for elliptic PDEs, kinetic theory for application to self-gravitating systems and plasmas, kinetic counterparts of the theory of rotating fluids, and integrability and numerical methods for Hamiltonian systems. I also have a growing interest in developing techniques from Bayesian statistics for application to astrophysical data.
From an astrophysics viewpoint, I am interested in the formation and evolution of low-mass stellar systems because they define the intriguing boundary between our current notions of star clusters and dwarf galaxies. This is the small-scale frontier of galaxy formation and a central challenge for near-field cosmology in the era of Gaia, Hubble, LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA, and JWST — with wide-ranging implications for fundamental physics. My activities aim at addressing three key open questions: How did the first stellar aggregates form in the early universe? Is there a missing link between stellar and super-massive black holes? Where is the limit for the presence of dark matter on small astrophysical scales?
I am an inaugural UKRI Future Leaders Fellow (2019-26) at the University of Edinburgh, where I have been based since 2012 — first as a Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 Fellow (2012-15) in the Applied and Computational Mathematics Theme of the School of Mathematics, then as a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow and Associate (2015-18) at the Institute for Astronomy, within the School of Physics and Astronomy. I am now jointly appointed at 0.5FTE to both Schools, but, strangely, I do not normalise to 1; I was confirmed for a Lectureship in 2021 and promoted to a Readership in 2023.
Made in Italy and forged in Scotland, I also held international research fellowships in Japan and United States, under the auspices of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science with The Royal Society (2018-19), The Gruber Foundation (2012-13), and The US-Italy Fulbright Commission (2010-11). I received my education in Theoretical Physics at the Università degli Studi di Milano (PhD 2012, MSc 2008, BSc 2005).
My work on the dynamics of stellar systems has been recognised by the William Herschel and Royal Astronomical Societies with the 2019 Caroline Herschel Prize Lectureship and by the International Astronomical Union with the 2012 Gruber Foundation Young Scientist Award.
Previously: Mathematics for Physics 1 (SoPA, Level 8, 2020-23).
Previously: HCMC Outreach Coordinator (2020-23), SoPA EDI Committee Member (2020-22), SoPA Graduate School Pastoral Team (2020-22).
STFC DiRAC Resource Allocation Committee, Astronomy and Cosmology Sub-Panel Member
2023 → 2025
UKRI Interdisciplinary Assessment College, Panel Member
2023 → 2025
Royal Society International Exchanges Committee, Member
2022 → 2027
Royal Astronomical Society Library Committee, Member
1 Sept 2020 → …
UKRI Peer Review College, Member
1 May 2019 → …
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Varri, Anna Lisa (Recipient), 1 Dec 2019
Prize: Prize (including medals and awards)
Varri, Anna Lisa (Recipient), 2010
Prize: Fellowships awarded competitively
Varri, Anna Lisa (Recipient), 2012
Prize: Prize (including medals and awards)
Varri, Anna Lisa (Recipient), 2015
Prize: Fellowships awarded competitively
Varri, Anna Lisa (Recipient), 2013
Prize: Fellowships awarded competitively
Varri, A. L., Chevyrev, I. & Kim, M.
1/03/23 → 14/03/25
Project: Research