Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Requisition Id 15435 Overview: We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Associate, in computational nuclear physics. This position focuses on nuclear theory with an emphasis on fundamental symmetries
-
breeding blankets, including computational fluid dynamic (CFD), thermal hydraulic, and magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) analyses. We seek individuals with advanced analytical and computational skills who can use
-
of the ORNL scientific community, you will be expected to commit to ORNL's Research Code of Conduct. Our full code of conduct and a statement by the Lab Director's office can be found here: https
-
across diverse clients. You will use Frontier's computational power to scale and validate these privacy-preserving algorithms, enabling breakthroughs across energy and image modeling domains. You will also
-
to address scientific and engineering problems, collaborate with leaders in your field and across the laboratory, while working with the world’s fastest computers, and disseminate innovative results through
-
research, each year carrying out more than 1,000 experiments in the physical, chemical, materials, biological and medical sciences. To learn more about Neutron Sciences at ORNL, please go to this link: http
-
post-doctoral research associate to simulate amorphous materials and crystallization reactions using atomic-scale simulations. As a post-doc, you will utilize high performance computing and rare event
-
and tool-using agents for experiment design, simulation steering, data collection, and lab/compute orchestration; planning and memory; multi-agent collaboration. Scientific Reasoning: Program/path
-
Postdoctoral Research Associate- AI/ML Accelerated Theory Modeling & Simulation for Microelectronics
that can incorporate multi-scale computational simulations to aid with data fusion across multiple modalities of experiments with the final goal of discovering novel materials phenomena or even new materials
-
challenges facing the nation. We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Associate who will support the Quantum Sensing and Computing Group in the Computational Science and Engineering Division (CSED), Computing