67 computational-physics-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" Postdoctoral research jobs at Argonne
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
may include work at Jefferson Lab, the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) program, detector research and development, and applications of AI in nuclear physics. Applications received by Tuesday, November 4
-
Applications are invited for post-doctoral positions in the Cosmological Physics and Advanced Computing Group (CPAC) Group in Argonne National Laboratory’s High Energy Physics (HEP) Division
-
) in the field of accelerator physics or a closely related science and engineering discipline Strong experience developing and applying computational modeling and simulation Familiarity with accelerator
-
The Data Science and Learning Division (DSL) of the Computing, Environment and Life Sciences Directorate (CELS) and the Materials Science Division (MSD) of the Physical Sciences and Engineering
-
Because of the drastically increasing demand from AI/ML applications, the computing hardware industry has gravitated towards data formats narrower than the IEEE double format that most computational
-
The High Energy Physics Division at Argonne National Laboratory invites applications for a postdoctoral research associate position to conduct research in machine learning (ML) for applications in
-
Science, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Physics, or a related field Demonstrated proficiency in Python and modern ML frameworks (e.g., PyTorch, TensorFlow
-
This position focuses on the research and development of novel radiation detectors and associated edge-computing circuits and algorithms for X-ray, particle, and nuclear physics experiments
-
Physics, Materials Science, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Applied Physics, or a closely related field with a focus on computational materials modeling. Density Functional Theory (DFT) for surfaces and
-
Argonne National Laboratory invites applications for postdoctoral research positions in experimental physics, with a focus on advancing superconducting particle detector technology for next