Biography:Lilia Ferrario

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Short description: Italian-Australian astrophysicist

Lilia Ferrario is an Italian and Australian applied mathematician and theoretical astrophysicist. She is a professor at the Australian National University (ANU) and director of the ANU Mathematical Sciences Institute.[1]

Research

Ferrario's research concerns stars with powerful rotating magnetic fields, including white dwarfs, pulsars, neutron stars, and magnetars.[2][3] Her work has also helped explain the processes through which white dwarfs accrete matter from companion stars and eventually become Type Ia supernovae,[4] and determined that much of the antimatter in the Milky Way comes from a more unusual type of supernova in which two orbiting white dwarfs collide.[5]

Education and career

Ferrario is originally from Bologna.[6] After graduating from the University of Bologna,[3] Ferrario completed her Ph.D. in 1989, at the Australian National University. Her dissertation, Accretion Processes in AM Herculis Systems, was jointly supervised by Dayal Wickramasinghe and Ian Tuohy.[7][8]

She was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Leicester in the UK, before returning to Australia to take up a research fellow position at the Australian National University,[3] in the early 1990s.[6] She headed the ANU Department of Mathematics from 2012 until 2014.[9] In 2021, after "more than 25 years of experience as an academic at MSI", she was named the director of the Mathematical Sciences Institute.[3]

Personal life

Ferrario and her husband, English-Australian science illustrator Russell Kightley,[10] are the parents of Australian model Stefania Ferrario. Ferrario met Kightley during her postdoctoral work at Leicester, and they moved together to Australia when Ferrario took a permanent position at ANU.[6]

References

  1. "Lilia Ferrario", People (ANU Mathematical Sciences Institute), https://maths.anu.edu.au/people/lilia-ferrario, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  2. Skilton, Nyssa (30 March 2009), "Monsters of the sky", Canberra Times, https://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~charley/papers/Newspapers/VanityMarch2009.pdf, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 New Director for the Mathematical Sciences Institute, ANU College of Science and Medicine, 22 November 2021, https://science.anu.edu.au/news-events/news/new-director-mathematical-sciences-institute, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  4. "Australian scientists help to discover crucial new information about exploding stars", The World Today (Australian Broadcasting Corporation), 17 August 2017, https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/worldtoday/oz-astronomers-make-supernova-discoveries/8820580, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  5. "Astrophysicists Solve Mystery of How Antimatter in the Milky Way Forms", SciTechDaily, 23 May 2017, https://scitechdaily.com/astrophysicists-solve-mystery-of-how-antimatter-forms/, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Egan, Laura (5 August 2020), "International model Stefania Ferrario stamps out harmful beauty standards", Il Globo, https://ilglobo.com/en/news/international-model-stefania-ferrario-stamps-out-harmful-beauty-standards-52086/#, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  7. "Lilia Ferrario", AstroGen (American Astronomical Society), https://astrogen.aas.org/front/searchdetails.php?agnumber=6038, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  8. Lilia Ferrario at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  9. Advisory Board, MATRIX, https://www.matrix-inst.org.au/governance/advisory-board/, retrieved 2026-04-05 
  10. Ferrario, Lilia (16 December 2017), "Happy 61st Birthday to my wonderful husband", Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/p/BcwddgxndyG/, retrieved 2026-04-05