54 engineering-computation-"https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "U.S" "University of St" Postdoctoral positions at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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. This position is in the Technology Integration group within NCCS. Specific areas of research interest include: Integration of memory encryption, confidential computing, and trusted execution environments on both
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data-model integration, leveraging the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Leadership-Class Computing Facilities to advance predictive understanding of complex environmental systems. Major Duties
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Requisition Id 15537 Overview: We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research associate in computational nuclear physics. This position focuses on nuclear theory with an emphasis on nuclear structure and
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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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Director's office can be found here: https://www.ornl.gov/content/research-integrity . Basic Qualifications: A PhD in physics, chemistry, biochemistry or a related field completed within the last five years
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Qualifications: Ph.D. in electrical engineering, computer science, or related discipline completed within the last five years. Demonstrated expertise in computed tomography (CT), with experience in sparse-view and
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through the High Flux Isotope Reactor, the Radiochemical Engineering Development Center, ORNL's other nuclear facilities, and an assemblage of world-leading scientists and engineers. Please visit https
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array of capabilities in nuclear nonproliferation, data analytics, cybersecurity, cyber-physical resiliency, geospatial science, and high-performance computing, our organization seeks to produce world
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), Energy Science and Technology Directorate (ESTD), at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). Major Duties/Responsibilities: Develop physics-based computational models, including Finite Element Analysis (FEA
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liquids, frustrated magnetism, excitonic magnets, and strongly correlated electron systems. You will work closely with theorists, experimentalists, and computer scientists to build robust, scalable