13621 - Postdoctoral Research Associate
| Posting date: | 26 January 2026 |
|---|---|
| Salary: | £41,064 to £48,822 per year |
| Hours: | Full time |
| Closing date: | 13 February 2026 |
| Location: | Edinburgh, Scotland |
| Remote working: | On-site only |
| Company: | University of Edinburgh |
| Job type: | Temporary |
| Job reference: | 13621 |
Summary
Grade UE07: £41,064 - £48,822 per annum
College of Science & Engineering / School of Mathematics
Full time: 35 hours per week
Fixed term: for 24 months, with starting date of 1/09/2026 or earlier
Up to two positions
We are looking for Postdoctoral Research Associates in dispersive PDEs and stochastic analysis.
The Opportunity:
The positions are funded by Leonardo Tolomeo’s ERC Starting Grant "CritRandPDEs". The project includes a variety of possible research directions in nonlinear dispersive PDEs, stochastic PDEs, and constructive quantum field theory.
The successful candidates are expected to contribute to undergraduate teaching and projects for further enhancing their career development. The appointees will join our thriving and growing Analysis & Probability theme within the School of Mathematics.
Your skills and attributes for success:
Ability to conduct independent research
Ability to disseminate research outcomes
Collaborative skills and communication skills
Teaching skills for undergraduate lectures/tutorials/projects
Organisational skills (such as for seminars and workshops)
College of Science & Engineering / School of Mathematics
Full time: 35 hours per week
Fixed term: for 24 months, with starting date of 1/09/2026 or earlier
Up to two positions
We are looking for Postdoctoral Research Associates in dispersive PDEs and stochastic analysis.
The Opportunity:
The positions are funded by Leonardo Tolomeo’s ERC Starting Grant "CritRandPDEs". The project includes a variety of possible research directions in nonlinear dispersive PDEs, stochastic PDEs, and constructive quantum field theory.
The successful candidates are expected to contribute to undergraduate teaching and projects for further enhancing their career development. The appointees will join our thriving and growing Analysis & Probability theme within the School of Mathematics.
Your skills and attributes for success:
Ability to conduct independent research
Ability to disseminate research outcomes
Collaborative skills and communication skills
Teaching skills for undergraduate lectures/tutorials/projects
Organisational skills (such as for seminars and workshops)