55 phd-structural-engineering "https:" "Multiple" Postdoctoral positions at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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develop cutting-edge differential privacy techniques for large-scale models across multiple institutions. This position offers a unique opportunity to work with the world's first exascale system
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Research Associates to apply their hydrological and water resources expertise toward cutting-edge waterpower and engineering research in the Water Resources Sciences and Engineering Group at Oak Ridge
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environmental conditions, and predicting photosynthesis at multiple scales. The selected postdoctoral scientist will work with a team of mathematicians, computational scientists, plant geneticists and
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and able to participate creatively in defining and refining research directions. Major Duties/Responsibilities The successful candidate will interact with a team of scientists and engineers at ORNL in a
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will involve designing beam dynamics experiments, measurement, simulation, and data analysis. This position resides in the Accelerator Physics Group in the Accelerator Science and Technology Section
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: To be eligible you must have completed a PhD in materials science, chemistry, physics, engineering, or a related field with in the last 5 years. Visa sponsorship is not available for this position
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. Research will involve growth of single crystals and measurements to understand their structural and physical properties including magnetism and thermal transport, as well as helping to identify new magnetic
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properties of the above materials. Collaborate with ORNL postdocs and staff who are involved in structural characterization. Participate in the development of new ideas and projects. Present and report
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to Computational Fluid Dynamics. Mathematical topics of interest include structure-preserving finite element methods, advanced solver strategies, multi-fluid systems, surrogate modeling, machine learning, and
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of NTI and CNMS to develop HPC workflows that can perform multi-fidelity simulations to predict and interpret a wide range of structural and electronic characterization techniques Develop physics-informed