Eline Tolstoy


Eline Tolstoy is a Dutch astronomer.

Life and education

Tolstoy grew up in Scotland and gained a BSc from the University of Edinburgh in 1988. She studied at Leiden University and then in 1995, she received her doctorate from the University of Groningen, under the supervision of A. Saha, Piet van der Kruit and Harvey Butcher. The title of her thesis was `Modeling the resolved stellar populations of nearby dwarf galaxies'.

Post-doctorate career

She worked as an ESA Postdoctoral Fellow, at ST-ECF Garching, Germany, followed by an ESO postdoctoral fellowship, Garching, Germany. She spent a year at Oxford University as Gemini Support Scientist.
She has been working at the University of Groningen since 2001. In 2007, she received a Vici grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research. She has been a full professor at the Kapteyn Institute of the University of Groningen since 2011.
Tolstoy is the Dutch project leader for the instrument that accompanies the European Extremely Large Telescope.

Research interests

Her research interests centre mainly on understanding the formation and evolution of small galaxies by studying their resolved stellar populations. She is interested to discover what these systems can tell us about larger galaxies and their internal processes and also the clues that they may provide to our cosmological understanding of galaxy formation and evolution; right from the earliest phases up to the present day. This is often called ‘Local Group Cosmology’, or ‘Stellar Archaeology. Tolstoy prefers the term ‘Galactic Palaeontology’

Awards

She was the 2006 Lecturer of the Year of the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences in Groningen
She won the 2007 :nl:Pastoor Schmeitsprijs|Pastoor Schmeitsprijs, simultaneously with :nl:Simon Portegies Zwart|Simon Portegies Zwart.
She gave the 2013 Royal Astronomical Society George Darwin Lecture with the title 'Galactic Archaeology.’