In 2015 Kartaltepe joined the
Rochester Institute of Technology, where she is Director of the Laboratory for Multiwavelength Astrophysics. She was a founder of the
Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) collaboration. She is part of leadership of the
Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey. CEERS is one of the first collaborations to conduct observations using the
James Webb Space Telescope, and looks to better understand the abundance of galaxies with
photometric redshifts between 3 and 9, as they were 11 – 13 billion years ago. Her other JWST project, COSMOS-Webb, surveyed a large patch of sky with a
Near Infrared Camera. It combined these data with mid-infrared images captured simultaneously. COSMOS-Webb looks to probe the first moments in which massive galaxies formed, and, using weak lensing, looked to map the dark matter distribution at early stages. It will help to identify the first fully evolved galaxies, which had stopped being active in the first two billion years after the
Big Bang. Kartaltepe's first observations from COSMOS-Webb identified considerably more early galaxies than expected, indicating that the universe expanded faster than expected. Alongside her research, Kartaltepe is committed to science communication and outreach. She delivered a talk on the design of the
James Webb Space Telescope at the 2022
Falling Walls. == Select publications ==