My research focuses on the study of very young planetary systems, where rocky planets may still be forming. In these systems, there is a great dynamic activity, which implies exchanges and processing of material within the debris disk generated as a consequence of star formation. Gaseous planets, formed during the first moments of the system’s life, may be largely responsible for this dynamic activity. Studying the dust, gas, and small bodies in these systems can provide us with information about the chemical composition and architecture of planets.

I obtained my degree in Physics from the University of Santiago de Compostela, and my Master’s degree in Astrophysics from the University of La Laguna (Tenerife). I obtained my PhD from the Autonomous University of Madrid, directed by Eva Villaver and Benjamín Montesinos, on the study of gas around main sequence stars. In 2020 I joined the Space Telescope Science Institute (Baltimore, USA), where I worked with JWST data studying debris disks. Since January 2023 I have been a Juan de la Cierva researcher at the CAB-CSIC in Villafranca del Castillo (Madrid).

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Webpage: isabelrebollido.com

KeywordsExoplanets, exocomets, debris disks, planet formation

Projects

Circumstellar material in its various forms: disks, dust, asteroids, planetesimals, (proto)planets and exocomets.

On the Rocks II