Field of Interest:astro-ph, cond-mat, cs, hep-ex, hep-lat, hep-ph, math-ph, nucl-ex, nucl-th
Region: North America
Job description:
Wayne State University invites applications for a non-tenure track Assistant Professor-Research in the Department of Computer Science as part of the JETSCAPE collaboration.
The Jet Energy-loss Tomography with a Statistically and Computationally Advanced Program Envelope (JETSCAPE) collaboration is an NSF funded multi-institutional project to study droplets of matter at extreme temperatures of more than a trillion degrees using jets of particles emanating from these droplets.
Matter at these temperatures last existed microseconds after the big bang, and is now routinely created at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and at CERN in Switzerland.
The collaboration involves teams of theoretical physicists, experimental physicists, statisticians, and computer scientists from Duke, MIT, McGill, Ohio-State, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab., Lawrence Livermore National Lab., Texas A&M, and Wayne State.
The term of the position will be one year, renewable annually for up to three years, beginning in August 2016. The position requires a Ph. D. in computer science, engineering, computational physics or related discipline with a demonstrated expertise in high-performance computing. Prior experience programming on GPU architectures would be highly desirable.
Apply for this position at https://jobs.wayne.edu posting number 042076.
More Information:https://jobs.wayne.edu/applicants/jsp/shared/position/JobDetails_css.jsp?postingId=520761
Region: North America
Job description:
Wayne State University invites applications for a non-tenure track Assistant Professor-Research in the Department of Computer Science as part of the JETSCAPE collaboration.
The Jet Energy-loss Tomography with a Statistically and Computationally Advanced Program Envelope (JETSCAPE) collaboration is an NSF funded multi-institutional project to study droplets of matter at extreme temperatures of more than a trillion degrees using jets of particles emanating from these droplets.
Matter at these temperatures last existed microseconds after the big bang, and is now routinely created at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and at CERN in Switzerland.
The collaboration involves teams of theoretical physicists, experimental physicists, statisticians, and computer scientists from Duke, MIT, McGill, Ohio-State, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab., Lawrence Livermore National Lab., Texas A&M, and Wayne State.
The term of the position will be one year, renewable annually for up to three years, beginning in August 2016. The position requires a Ph. D. in computer science, engineering, computational physics or related discipline with a demonstrated expertise in high-performance computing. Prior experience programming on GPU architectures would be highly desirable.
Apply for this position at https://jobs.wayne.edu posting number 042076.
More Information:https://jobs.wayne.edu/applicants/jsp/shared/position/JobDetails_css.jsp?postingId=520761