Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The NSLS-II is seeking an exceptional Postdoctoral Research Associate to join a collaborative research effort on developing novel methods, applicable for extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL
-
future collider experiments. The successful candidates will also contribute to the development of trigger technologies intended for use at the HL-LHC and by future experiments. Applicants should have a
-
experiment at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. The Omega Group has major responsibilities in detector operations and software development, and has leading roles in the ATLAS High Luminosity Large-Hadron Collider
-
interaction physics, precision calculations of (g-2) and PDF determinations, and the development of new algorithms, among others. Position Description The successful candidate will be expected to conduct
-
. The EIC will be a discovery machine for unlocking the secrets of the “glue” that binds the building blocks of visible matter in the universe. The machine design is based on the existing and highly optimized
-
studies and computer simulations Collaborate with the BMAD development team at Cornell University by implementing new features into the code Participate in the EIC design effort in a more general sense
-
the development of new radical scavengers for the conversion of radiolytic solvent radicals into secondary reductants/oxidants or unreactive species. Exploiting the knowledge gained from the above mentioned studies
-
issues. Position Description The position will support the operation and continued development of a center for high throughput x-ray crystallographic fragment screening (XCFS). The successful candidate
-
scattering. This work is to be done as a part of a BNL Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD-B) project, focused on gathering experimental characterization of materials predicted to have non
-
The Physics Department is deeply involved in the development of the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), a next-generation facility that will advance the long-term vision for nuclear physics. In December