Lugaro worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the
University of Notre Dame and
University of Cambridge. She moved to
Utrecht University as a
Dutch Research Council VENI Fellow. In 2008, she returned to
Australia, where she was made an
Australian Research Council Future Fellow and Senior Lecturer at
Monash University. She used radioactive dating to understand the age of meteorites. She moved to
Konkoly Observatory at the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2014. Lugaro believes that it will be possible to uncover the history of the
Solar System by examining the origin of these radioactive nuclei. She has studied neutron stars, and showed that their collisions can result in supernova that collapse whilst spinning, generating strong magnetic fields and super heavy elements. == Selected publications ==