Berkeley Lab seeking applicants for Post-Doctoral Fellowship

The U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is now accepting applications for the Luis W. Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Computational Science to develop computational and numerical methods for research in areas such as climate, nanoscience, numerical algorithms and scientific computing. The deadline for applications for the coming academic year is Tuesday, February 1, 2005. The fellowship, sponsored by the Computational Research Division and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing (NERSC) Center Division at Berkeley Lab, was established to encourage the development and application of tools to advance scientific research. The fellowship enables a recent graduate with a Ph.D. (or equivalent) to acquire further scientific training and to develop professional maturity for independent research. Applicants must be recent graduates (within the past four years) with a strong emphasis on computing or computational science. For the 2004-05 academic year, fellowship applicants may apply in any of the following four projects: Computational Nanoscience Position CR/17182: Develop mathematical/computational methods for large nanosystems, including implementing efficient strategies for the solution of large eigenvalue problems on parallel architectures. More information can be found at http://www.lbl.gov/CS/Careers/OpenPositions/CR17182.html . Position CR/17572: Develop electronic structure calculations of various nanostructures (colloidal quantum dots, conjugated polymers, electronic levels and transports); and methodology developments for larg-scale nanosystem electronic structure calculations (e.g,, charge patching methods, polarizations, impurities and transports). More information can be found at http://www.lbl.gov/CS/Careers/OpenPositions/CR17572.html . The Alvarez Fellowship is offered as a one-year term appointment with the possibility of a one-year renewal. The successful applicant will be compensated with a competitive salary and excellent benefits. Additionally, the successful candidate will have access to the NERSC Center’s high-performance computing resources. The successful applicant is expected to be involved in one of the areas that currently have post-doctoral openings, and will be assigned a scientific mentor. For more information on the Luis W. Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship, please refer to http://www.lbl.gov/CS/html/alvarez.html . Applications are due by February 1 for an appointment to coincide with the coming academic year. Interested applicants should submit a letter of application, resume or CV, and a list of three references by email to AlvarezFellowship@lbl.gov or by standard mail to: Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship Position number/WSO Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1 Cyclotron Road 50B4230 Berkeley, CA 94720 Attn: Fellowship Coordinator The fellowship is named for Dr. Luis W. Alvarez, a Nobel Laureate and physicist who worked at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. In the 1950s, Alvarez opened a new era in high-energy physics research with his proposal to build a pressurized chamber filled with liquid hydrogen. Known as a “bubble chamber,” this device would allow scientists to discover new particles and analyze their behavior. In his 1955 prospectus for such an experimental facility, Alvarez became one of the first scientists to propose using computing devices for analyzing experimental data, even before such computers were actually available. By the 1960s, Alvarez’ vision was reality. His colleagues at Berkeley Lab were using computers to track some 1.5 million particle physics events annually and developed scientific computing techniques which were adopted by researchers around the world. This effort led to Alvarez receiving the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1968. NERSC, which is located at Berkeley Lab, is the Department of Energy’s flagship facility for unclassified computing, providing researchers across the country with some of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. The Computational Research Division creates computational tools and techniques that enable scientific breakthroughs, by conducting applied research and development in computer science, computational science and applied mathematics. For more information about additional opportunities in Computing Sciences, please visit our web site at http://www.lbl.gov/CS/Careers . Berkeley Lab (www.lbl.gov) conducts unclassified research and is managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy.