53 phd-rehabilitation-engineering-computer-science Postdoctoral positions at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
and nuclear structure and reactions. The position is part of the nuclear theory team that resides in the Theoretical and Computational Physics group in the Physics Division, Physical Sciences
-
success. Basic Qualifications: A PhD in Physics, Materials Science, Electrical Engineering, or a closely related field. Preferred Qualifications: Demonstrated experience in nanoscale device fabrication
-
, and measure success. Basic Qualifications: Ph.D. in Polymer Science and Engineering, Polymer Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, or a closely related field, obtained
-
respectful workplace – in how we treat one another, work together, and measure success. Basic Qualifications: A PhD in mechanical engineering, industrial engineering, electrical engineering, environmental
-
, work together, and measure success. Basic Qualifications: A PhD in engineering, computer science, or a related field completed within the last five years. Expertise in systems dynamics and controls
-
. in Hydrology, Earth system science, Water resources engineering, Computational sciences, Computer sciences or a related field completed within the last 5 years (or expected soon). Demonstrated
-
workplace – in how we treat one another, work together, and measure success. Basic Qualifications: A PhD in evolutionary biology, plant biology, genomics, bioinformatics, mathematics, statistics, computer
-
measure success. Basic Qualifications: A PhD in Materials Science and Engineering or a related field completed within the last 5 years Preferred Qualifications: Strong background in computational and image
-
safety at ORNL and DOE sites. This position resides in the Performance Engineering group in the Data and AI Systems Section in Computer Science and Mathematics division within Computing and Computational
-
at the intersection of quantum information science and fundamental materials physics. The research program focuses on understanding the fundamental limits of spin-based quantum sensors as probes of magnetic and