His research is focused on using super-computers to build and test models of the growth of galaxies within vast dark matter halos, and in particular focuses on the formation of the first galaxies in the early universe during the "Epoch of Reionisation". These models aim to improve our understanding of the nature of dark matter, and the large scale properties of the universe.
Duffy was born in Peterborough, England. His family migrated to Northern Ireland when he was four years old, where he attended Ballyclare High School.[1]
His undergraduate studies in physics were conducted at the University of Manchester. He incorporated periods of study in the Netherlands on an EU scholarship, working on supercomputers at Europe's oldest observatory in Leiden University, and undertook physics at the University of Amsterdam, even though he spoke no Dutch when he started.[2] He graduated with a MPhys (1st) in 2005.
He completed his PhD in Astronomy and Astrophysics at Jodrell Bank Observatory based in the University of Manchester in 2009, with his thesis entitled "Investigation of large scale structure in the Universe".[1][3][4]
As Duffy was completing his doctorate, work was starting on the Australian component of the world's largest astronomical facility, the Square Kilometre Array. His doctoral work had covered similar topics, and he was invited to join the first stage of this telescope; the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP).
He moved to Perth, Western Australia in 2009 to take up the position at the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research.
Three years later, he moved to Melbourne to accept an academic post as Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, where he investigated the formation of the first galaxies in the early universe.[1][3]
Then in 2014 he took up the position of associate professor at Swinburne University of Technology, still based in Melbourne.[5][6]
His supercomputer simulations have shown that in very early galaxies, the rate of star formation was not enough to consume the infalling cold gas. Earlier models had assumed this was essentially molecular hydrogen, but the model from Duffy and the DRAGONS ("Dark-ages, Reionization And Galaxy-formation Observables Numerical Simulation") consortium also accounted for atomic (non-molecular) hydrogen. As a result, there was a deficit in the amount of gas that could form stars compared to the amount flowing in.[7][8] By modelling the galaxies like an economy, Duffy was able to show that the early galaxies were in a "Great Galactic Recession". Those simulations focusing on the dark matter around galaxies demonstrate that without the dark matter, there would not have been enough time since the start of the universe for our galaxy to form.[9]
He has attempted to directly detect this dark matter as part of SABRE ("Sodium-iodide with Active Background REjection"), an international research consortium with teams in Italy, US and Australia. SABRE is constructing the southern hemisphere's first dark matter detector 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) underground in a gold mine in Stawell, Victoria.[10][11][12] He is also part of two Australian Research Council Centres of Excellence, investigating the origin of matter (ASTRO-3D) and seeing the Universe with gravitational waves (OzGrav),[13]
and he was a member of the worldwide OWLS (OverWhelmingly Large Simulations) collaboration.[14]
He wrote and starred in a 2012 science documentary about dark matter, Dark. Since December 2012 he has co-hosted the YouTube series Pint in the Sky with Katie Mack,[28] and in March 2017 he started a new podcast, Cosmic Vertigo with co-host Amanda Bauer.[29] As part of Science Week 2017, Duffy and Katie Mack launched a virtual reality tour of the Universe, using custom-made headsets and a free app.[30]
Duffy's good looks have helped to attract media attention – MamaMia commented that "Unfortunately, I couldn’t hear what he was saying over the sound of his cheekbones."[31]
In January 2016, Duffy married Sarah Clarke. He qualified as an Australian citizen in October 2014.[1]
Duffy has a keen interest in science fiction, telling the Belfast Telegraph:
Sci-fi was a big inspiration. My mum had remarried and my stepdad at the time was a ferocious nerd like me. We watched everything – Star Trek, Star Wars, all the classic sci-fi books by Asimov and Arthur C Clarke – and it opened up this world to me of all these possibilities... And, of course, Stephen Hawking's books – how could you not want to study physics? There are these incredible concepts – black holes, the universe expanding – that are so bizarre and yet are actually part of our world.[1]
2012 – He was named one of Western Australia Sunday Times magazine's "Best and Brightest".[32]
2013 – Victorian State Finalist in the Fresh Science Award for science communication.[33]
2013 – Commendation in the Astronomical Society of Australia's Louise Webster Prize for "outstanding research by a scientist early in their post-doctoral career".[34]
2015 – He was named as one of Men’s Style magazine's Men of Influence in 2015, "recognising the achievements of a diverse range of Australian men under 45 years of age".[35]
2015 – Commonwealth Bank's Australian of the Day.[36]
2016 – Finalist for Club Melbourne Fellowship[37][38]
2016 – Finalist for the Australian Museum's Eureka Prize for promoting understanding of Australian science research.[39]
2016 – Australia's Chief Scientist Alan Finkel named Duffy an "Australian Science Superhero".[40]
2018 – Winner of the Australian Museum's Celestino Eureka Prize for Promoting Understanding of Science (one of the Eureka Prizes).[41][42]
As of August 2017[update], NASA's Astrophysics Data System (ADS) lists 29 publications by Duffy, which have 1,487 citations[43] while Cornell University's arXiv lists 31 of his papers, covering a range of topics in general astronomy and cosmology.[44]
Duffy, A. R.; Moss, A.; Staveley-Smith, L. (2 January 2013). "Cosmological Surveys with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia. 29 (2): 202–211. arXiv:1103.3944. Bibcode:2012PASA...29..202D. doi:10.1071/AS11013. S2CID119257539.
^"The Louise Webster Prize". asa.astronomy.org.au. The Astronomical Society of Australia. Archived from the original on 20 October 2018. Retrieved 27 August 2017.