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Jessica Dempsey takes up post as head of the Square Kilometre Array Observatory

02 Jun 2026 Michael Banks
Jessica Dempsey at Jodrell Bank
Next step: astronomer Jessica Dempsey will lead the Square Kilometre Array Observatory for the next five years. (Courtesy: Square Kilometre Array Observatory)

Astronomer Jessica Dempsey has become director-general of the Square Kilometre Array Observatory (SKAO), which will be the world’s largest and most sensitive radio telescope when it opens next year. Dempsey will now serve a five-year term as director-general and succeeds Philip Diamond, who held the role since 2012.

Three decades in the making, the SKAO is based in South Africa and Australia and consists of 197 dishes and 131 072 antennas to study how galaxies form, the nature of dark matter, and whether life exists on other planets.

The Australian side, known as SKA-Low, will focus on low-frequency obervations, while South Africa’s SKA-Mid will observe mid-range frequencies.

The headquarters of the organization is based in the UK at Jodrell Bank and SKAO has 13 full members, which includes China, Germany and India.

From film star to the stars

Dempsey studied both astrophysics and theatre and film science as an undergraduate at the University of New South Wales before becoming an actor in the late 1990s.

Dempsey then did a PhD in astronomy at UNSW, graduating in 2007 before working at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope at Mauna Kea Observatory in Hawaii, becoming operations manager in 2012 and then deputy director of the telescope in 2016.

In 2022 Dempsey became director of the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy and throughout her career has championed more equitable opportunity and experience for women and all underrepresented individuals in science, in 2023 becoming professor of ethics in astronomy at Radboud University.

Dempsey says it is “humbling” to lead the organization and is “passionately dedicated” to its success.

SKAO is currently preparing for the start of “science verification”, in which astronomers will gain access to the first SKAO data. This is due to begin for the SKA-Low telescope in Australia in the second half of 2027.

“As someone who loves nothing more than building and running telescopes, there is not a better time to be asked to take up this role – we are just getting to the cool stuff,” adds Dempsey. “This is a daring project, unprecedented in scale and scope, and it will need the skills of every single team member on three continents and all the support of our broad global partnership to see it come to light.”

Diamond, meanwhile, noted that the observatory is in “very good hands” with Dempsey’s appointment.

“This is a demanding role, with the need to balance scientific, political, diplomatic, financial and many other considerations,” adds Diamond. “I have full faith in [Dempsey’s] ability to lead this extraordinary organization through its next chapter.”

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