Intensity Frontier Post-doctoral Position at the University of Texas at Arlington
The High Energy Physics group at the University of Texas Arlington (UTA) invites outstanding candidates to apply for a postdoctoral associate position to work on experimental neutrino physics. The successful candidate will be asked to play a leadership role on the suite of liquid argon time projection chamber neutrino experiments currently underway at Fermilab, known as the Short Baseline Neutrino Programs (SBN). In addition, the candidate will have an opportunity to take part in the future US flagship long baseline neutrino program, the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment
We are seeking a highly motivated, outstanding PhD physicist, in the area of high energy physics experiment, to be based primarily at Fermilab. We expect the selected candidate to play leading roles in the ICARUS and SBND experiments. In particular, the successful candidate is expected to make major contributions to the commissioning, data taking and data analyses of the ICARUS experiment which is beginning its operation presently and to contribute to the construction, installation and commissioning of the SBND trigger system. The successful candidate will also lead analyses on ICARUS and SBND related to beyond standard model searches and/or neutrino-nuclear interaction cross-sections.
Application review will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled. Interested candidates should arrange to have a cover letter, curriculum vitae, statement of research interests, and two letters of recommendation to the Academic Jobs Online site at. Any further questions concerning this job posting can be sent to jaehoonyu@uta.edu and jonathan.asaadi@uta.edu. University of Texas Arlington is an equal opportunity employer and will not discriminate against any employee or applicant because of race, age, sex, color, sexual orientation, physical or mental disability, religion, ancestry or national origin, marital status, genetic information, or political affiliation. Minorities and women are encouraged to apply. |