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10991 - XLZD Postdoctoral Research Associate
Dyddiad hysbysebu: | 25 Gorffennaf 2024 |
---|---|
Cyflog: | £39,347 i £46,974 bob blwyddyn |
Oriau: | Llawn Amser |
Dyddiad cau: | 22 Awst 2024 |
Lleoliad: | Edinburgh, Scotland |
Gweithio o bell: | Ar y safle yn unig |
Cwmni: | University of Edinburgh |
Math o swydd: | Dros dro |
Cyfeirnod swydd: | 10991 |
Crynodeb
Grade UE07: £39,347 to £46,974 per annum.
School of Physics and Astronomy / Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics / CSE
Full time: 35 hours per week.
Fixed Term: For 39 months.
The Opportunity:
The international XLZD consortium is developing a next-generation rare event observatory based on the world-leading liquid xenon technology. The experiment will search for electro-weak-scale particle dark mater and enable world-class sensitivity to other rare physics processes such as neutrinoless double-beta decay and astrophysical neutrino interactions. Building on expertise from the world-leading LZ detector, our group has strategic leadership in the Outer Detector for the UK XLZD project, which aims to bring the experiment to the UK’s Boulby Underground Laboratory. This position is a combination of essential simulation and design studies with hardware and prototyping work, and you will join a growing and vibrant dark matter group consisting of two academics, three PDRAs and four PhD students.
Your skills and attributes for success:
Possess, or be about to obtain, a PhD in Experimental Particle Physics
Proven track record of performing high quality research in Experimental Particle Physics
Good working knowledge of C++ and/or Python programming languages
Ability to self-motivate and work independently
Ability to work as part of a team while showing leadership and initiative
School of Physics and Astronomy / Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics / CSE
Full time: 35 hours per week.
Fixed Term: For 39 months.
The Opportunity:
The international XLZD consortium is developing a next-generation rare event observatory based on the world-leading liquid xenon technology. The experiment will search for electro-weak-scale particle dark mater and enable world-class sensitivity to other rare physics processes such as neutrinoless double-beta decay and astrophysical neutrino interactions. Building on expertise from the world-leading LZ detector, our group has strategic leadership in the Outer Detector for the UK XLZD project, which aims to bring the experiment to the UK’s Boulby Underground Laboratory. This position is a combination of essential simulation and design studies with hardware and prototyping work, and you will join a growing and vibrant dark matter group consisting of two academics, three PDRAs and four PhD students.
Your skills and attributes for success:
Possess, or be about to obtain, a PhD in Experimental Particle Physics
Proven track record of performing high quality research in Experimental Particle Physics
Good working knowledge of C++ and/or Python programming languages
Ability to self-motivate and work independently
Ability to work as part of a team while showing leadership and initiative