Ke Fang
Ke Fang is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Her research focuses on understanding the Universe through its energetic messengers, including ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, gamma rays, and high-energy neutrinos. She runs numerical simulations to study theories of astroparticle sources and analyzes data from HAWC, Fermi-LAT, and IceCube. Ke obtained her Ph.D. in astrophysics from the University of Chicago in 2015. After that, she held a Joint Space-Science Institute (JSI) fellowship jointly at the University of Maryland and the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, from 2015 to 2018, and a NASA Einstein fellowship at Stanford University from 2018 to 2020.
Select Publications
Cross-Correlation Study of High-energy Neutrinos and Tracers of Large-Scale Structure (Journal Article) Astrophys.J. 894 (2020)iopscience.iop.org | arxiv.org
GeV-TeV Counterparts of SS 433/W50 from Fermi-LAT and HAWC Observations (Journal Article) Astrophys.J. Lett. 889 (2020)
iopscience.iop.org | arxiv.org
Very-high-energy particle acceleration powered by the jets of the microquasar SS 433 (Journal Article) Nature 562 (2018), 82-85
nature.com | arxiv.org
Linking High-Energy Cosmic Particles by Black Hole Jet Embedded in Large-Scale Structures (Journal Article) Nature Physics (2018)
nature.com | arxiv.org
High-Energy Neutrinos from Millisecond Magnetars formed from the Merger of Binary Neutron Stars (Journal Article) Astrophys.J. 849 (2017) 2
iopscience.iop.org | arxiv.org
Honors and Awards
- NASA Einstein Fellowship (2018-2020)
- JSI Fellowship (2015-2018)
CONTACT INFORMATION
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Department of Physics
Chamberlin Hall
Madison, Wisconsin
WIPAC
222 W Washington Ave
5th floor
Madison, WI 53703
Faculty Profiles
WIPAC faculty and students are involved in IceCube, the Askaryan Radio Array (ARA), the High-Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) experiment, Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), Big Data, and DM-Ice.
Visitors
In keeping with our vision, we encourage and support visits from researchers who have interests, or who wish to develop interests, in several of our research areas.
Fellows
The postdoctoral fellowship program was created to honor the late John Bahcall, a prominent physicist and a founding member of the IceCube experiment. In 2015 the Balzan Fellowship was created after Francis Halzen was awarded the Balzan Prize.