In a 2012 paper in
Science, De Mink and her collaborators determined that binary merges are ubiquitous among massive stars (such as Type O stars), with 70% of massive stars exchanging mass at some point with a companion, resulting in binaries in a third of these cases. For this transformative work causing scientists to reassess the importance of binary stars in stellar evolution, De Mink has been featured in a number of popular science outlets, such as the
Christian Science Monitor. De Mink also has widely recognized work on black hole mergers with
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) implications, as she explained how massive stars can get close enough to each other to form black hole binaries if they exchange enough material to form a homogeneous envelope. == Awards ==