55 algorithm-development-"Meta"-"Meta" Postdoctoral positions at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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uncertainty quantification. The position comes with a travel allowance and access to advanced computing resources. The MMD group is responsible for the design and development of numerical algorithms and
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uniting national laboratories, academic institutions and industry partners, the QSC is endeavoring to advance American innovation and global leadership by enhancing the computational robustness, algorithmic
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(ORNL). This position will focus on the development, characterization, and application of engineered nanoparticles for medical isotope systems, including technologies relevant to isotope processing
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, magnetic, and superconducting properties Work with other atomic characterization expertise for scanning tunneling microscopy and quantum device development Publish scientific papers in key journals and
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Requisition Id 16127 Overview: We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Associate who will develop and apply electronic structure theory approaches to examine the fundamental properties of a range
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materials. In this role, you will develop and apply methods that integrate physics‑guided image correction with intelligent (AI/ML‑enabled) data‑acquisition strategies. Key objectives include (1) implementing
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National Laboratory (ORNL). This is an opportunity to develop novel tools and techniques across scales (river basin to national), publish in top-tier journals, collaborate with industry and academic partners
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process-based modeling of hydrologic or land surface processes. The WSMG group develops advanced surface/subsurface integrated hydrologic and reactive transport models, works with other groups to compare
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, together with band-excitation and internally developed modalities, to probe environmental- and temperature-dependent behavior and to develop new scanning probe techniques aimed at discovering underlying
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physical characterization techniques (differential scanning calorimetry, dynamic light scattering, small angle neutron and/or x-ray scattering) to characterize the DIBs; and (3) Develop/implement image