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About the Role This is an opportunity to work as part of the team and project “Accelerating charged particles in space” funded by a Royal Society URF led by Dr Heli Hietala. The postdoc project
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Dr Heli Hietala. The postdoc project involves primarily simulations informed by observations, related data analysis and theory/models, comparing various aspects of shock particle acceleration and meso
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, understanding and manipulating interactions between charged particles and molecules in solution (Nature 2010, Nature Nanotech 2012, 2015, 2017, 2024). Recently the lab’s work has shed much needed light on
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particles and molecules in solution (Nature 2010, Nature Nanotech 2012, 2015, 2017, 2024). Recently the lab’s work has shed much needed light on the long-standing and counterintuitive observation
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technologies for future particle vertexing and tracking silicon detectors. In close collaboration with other UK universities and STFC laboratories, as well as in partnership with international institutions and
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of areas. You will join the ATLAS group in the Particle Physics Research Centre, working within our L1Calo team, making leading contributions to the ATLAS calorimeter trigger upgrade for the high
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of areas. You will join the ATLAS group in the Particle Physics Research Centre, working within our L1Calo team, making leading contributions to the ATLAS calorimeter trigger upgrade for the high
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and leading a programme of numerical simulations relating to all aspects of our research on P-MoPAs; using particle-in-cell computer codes hosted on local and national high-performance computing
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found in Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) implosions transport of charged particles is a challenging problem that is difficult to simulate as well as diagnose in experiments. For example, particle
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particle physics. Previous experience of LHCb simulation development, testbeam operations or detector commissioning would be advantageous. Candidates are expected to demonstrate the ability to plan and