Federica Bianco profile photo

Federica Bianco

Associate Professor

  • Newark DE UNITED STATES

Federica works on data-driven solutions to problems across disciplines

Contact

Media

Social

Biography

Federica is an Associate Professor at the University of Delaware in the Departments of Physics and Astronomy and in the Biden School of Public Policy and Administration, and a Resident Faculty in the Data Science Institute.

She works on data-driven solutions to problems that span from the nature of explosions in the sky to sustainability on earth. She is an expert in time-domain and multi-messenger astronomy and in the application of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence across domains. She is passionate about demystifying AI and empowering scientist, policy makers, and anyone who would listen to understand how AI works, how it can harm us, and how it can help us.

She served as Deputy Project Scientist for Rubin Observatory Construction, the largest ground-based optical astrophysical facility ever built, which in 2026 will begin the Legacy Survey of Space and Time: a 10-year survey of the southern sky that will deliver the largest ever dataset of astrophysical objects, from asteroids and nearby stars and planets to the farthest explosions in the Universe.
She is TED 2019 fellow.

She is a passionate communicator: contact her regarding public speaking engagements.

When not sciencing, she likes fighting.

Areas of Expertise

Data Science
Astronomical Survey Science
Computer vision applied to astronomy and geography
Physics and Astronomy
Time Domain Astronomy
S​upernova Science

Media Appearances

Vera Rubin Scientists Reveal Telescope’s First Images

The New York Times  online

2025-06-25

When asked about what surprises might be hiding in the data, Federica Bianco, Rubin’s deputy project scientist, said that these were unknown unknowns. “It’s really an adventurous horizon,” she said.
Two of the first images show snippets of the Virgo Cluster, a group of galaxies some 55 million light-years away.

View More

Opening a new window into the universe

UDaily  online

2025-06-18

Several University of Delaware faculty members — including astrophysicist Federica Bianco, astronomer John Gizis, data scientist David Hong and UD affiliate Beth Willman, CEO of the LSST Discovery Alliance — are in leadership and supporting roles as preparation moves steadily toward the late-2025 start of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). LSST has been described by the National Science Foundation (NSF) as “the most comprehensive data-gathering mission in the history of astronomy.”

View More

Astrophysicist explains how boxing makes her a better scientist

WHYY  online

2019-06-06

Federica Bianco says colleagues from both careers are surprised at her alternate identity, but each role enhances the other.

View More

Articles

Every Data Point Counts: Stellar Flares as a Case Study of Atmosphere-aided Studies of Transients in the LSST Era

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series

2024-06-10

Due to their short timescale, stellar flares are a challenging target for the most modern synoptic sky surveys. The upcoming Vera C. Rubin Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), a project designed to collect more data than any precursor survey, is unlikely to detect flares with more than one data point in its main survey.

View more

Light curve classification with DistClassiPy: A new distance-based classifier

Astronomy and Computing

2024-07-01

The rise of synoptic sky surveys has ushered in an era of big data in time-domain astronomy, making data science and machine learning essential tools for studying celestial objects. While tree-based models (e.g. Random Forests) and deep learning models dominate the field, we explore the use of different distance metrics to aid in the classification of astrophysical objects.

View more

Multifilter UV to Near-infrared Data-driven Light-curve Templates for Stripped-envelope Supernovae

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series

2024-11-29

While the spectroscopic classification scheme for stripped-envelope supernovae (SESNe) is clear, and we know that they originate from massive stars that lost some or all of their envelopes of hydrogen and helium, the photometric evolution of classes within this family is not fully characterized.

View more

Research Grants

The Effects of Subpopulations and Policy Change on COVID19 Hospital Demand Models

National Institutes of Health

Co-Investigator, 2020

Characterizing the Global Illicit Trade in Energy-Critical Materials using Machine Learning, Remote Sensing, and Qualitative Research

National Science Foundation Award Number: 2039857.

Co-Principal Investigator, 2021

Detecting and studying light echoes in the era of Rubin and Artificial Intelligence

National Science Foundation Award Number: 2108841.

Principal Investigator, 2021

Accomplishments

Arts and Sciences Outstanding Advocacy Award, University of Delaware

2025

NASA Silver Group Achievement Award, Conferred “for your exceptional work as part of the NASA Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Independent Study Team (UAPIST)”

2024

Ted Fellow

2019

Education

Alma Mater Studiorum – Università di Bologna

B.S.

Astronomy

2003

University of Pennsylvania

M.S.

Physics

2007

University of Pennsylvania

Ph.D.

Physics

2010