Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Field
-
and heterointerfaces. The postdoc will lead experimental design, data acquisition, and quantitative reconstruction. The appointees will work within a highly collaborative team spanning multiple DOE user
-
operations Develop, lead, and execute innovative R&D programs in electron and X-ray microscopy that achieve international recognition and align with CNM and Argonne strategic priorities Conduct original
-
extraction and analysis of sequencing-based omics data. Experience in bioreactor configuration, inline/online sensor integration, and PID-based process control; familiarity with bioreactor automation systems
-
DNA from soils Carry out library preparation for long read sequencing Use CRISPR-Cas to edit genomes of common soil bacteria Establish and maintain cultures of common freshwater Cyanobacteria This role
-
(baseline 6-element prototype at Sector 25 to ~18 analyzer elements), mechanical/optical layouts, tolerances, alignment strategy, and stability requirements, detector, motion, and sample environment
-
aligned with Argonne’s and the DOE’s missions Leverage existing facilities in autonomous labs, with the freedom to build other novel platforms Publish in refereed journals and present at conferences
-
combines self-directed and collaborative research aligned with CNM strategic themes, alongside scientific support for CNM users. CNM is a DOE Office of Science user facility that provides researchers
-
. Conduct large-scale LLM training, including pretraining, fine-tuning, RL tuning, and domain-specific adaptation on HPC systems. Design and implement fine-tuning and RL strategies to optimize LLM alignment
-
. As part of a multidisciplinary team spanning multiple Argonne divisions, you will contribute to the design, fabrication, and characterization of superconducting devices based on high kinetic inductance
-
looking for candidates whose research program aligns with the 2023 Long Range Plan for Nuclear Physics, focusing on lab-based tests of fundamental symmetries via precision experiments. The ideal candidate