Post-Doc Research Associate
Job Description
Benefits
Pulled from the full job description
- Health insurance
- Vision insurance
Full job description
Posting Details
Department
Physics and Astronomy - 319000
Posting Open Date
06/27/2024
Application Deadline
07/01/2024
Open Until Filled
No
Position Type
Postdoctoral Scholar
Position Title
Post-Doc Research Associate
Vacancy ID
PDS004270
Full-time/Part-time
Full-Time Temporary
Hours per week
40
FTE
1
Work Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Position Location
North Carolina, US
Hiring Range
Proposed Start Date
Estimated Duration of Appointment
12 Months
Position Information
Be a Tar Heel!
A global higher education leader in innovative teaching, research and public service, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill consistently ranks as one of the nation’s top public universities and is among is the top ten research universities in the nation for federal research expenditures as well as for federally funded social and behavioral sciences research and development.
Here at Carolina, our highly skilled postdocs play a vital role in our research enterprise and towards our overall commitment to research excellence. Across many disciplines, postdocs contribute to the intellectual vitality of the University. They provide innovative ideas and perspectives, foster a stimulating research environment and advance knowledge within their fields. Postdocs are crucial members of our scientific research workforce, contributors to our research outputs and an important reason why Carolina is one of the leading public research institutions in the country.
UNC-Chapel Hill offers postdocs comprehensive medical and vision coverage, paid leave, and benefits and services that support professional development and a healthy work/life balance. Chapel Hill regularly ranks as one of the best college towns and best places to live in the United States, a reputation guided by the diverse social, cultural, recreation and professional opportunities that span the campus and community.
Primary Purpose of Organizational Unit
Our primary mission is providing instruction of the highest quality in physics and astronomy to undergraduate and graduate students at UNC-CH. Training in physics is fundamental among the natural sciences because it provides understanding of the forces governing the structure of matter, from subatomic particles to the large-scale structure of the universe. Our departmental instructional mission spans all segments of the student community. Over 60% of all college graduates from UNC-CH have taken a course in our department. Among them: undergraduate liberal arts majors who should master the power of quantitative reasoning; undergraduates seeking a degree in another of the natural sciences, who need physics as a foundation for their advanced scientific training; the small number of undergraduates who major in physics, to whom we provide broad and rigorous training. Our graduate education and research advances frontiers of knowledge at the two extremes of space and time, from the very small) the realm of particle physics) to the very large (the realm of astronomy, while expanding the boundaries of knowledge in the many subfields spanning length scales between. Forefront physics and astronomy research requires access to well-equipped laboratories and extensive computing capabilities; it also must be supported by comprehensive and accessible library collections. Again, in research at this advanced level, the bridging aspect of physics provides basic interdisciplinary insight for many other sciences. A strong managerial, administrative, and technical staff supports this instructional mission. Duties of these employees range from budget planning and management for the numerous research grants held by faculty in the department to maintaining course and student records. These activities are usually accomplished in a standard 40- hour week schedule.
Position Summary
The Argus Array will be the first very large optical telescope array, with a light collecting area equivalent to a 5-meter telescope and a 55-gigapixel digital camera, which will be the largest ever built. The Array will push our observations of the universe into a new regime, scanning the sky 100,000x faster than current nightly-cadence sky surveys. Argus will capture a continuous two-color, 55-gigapixel movie of the night sky, shared with the entire astronomical community in real-time through public transient alerts, images, and light curves with millions of epochs for hundreds of millions of stars. Joining our team of astronomers, telescope-instrumentalists, and data scientists, you will be responsible for the Argus Array’s systems engineering. Three years of prototyping efforts have developed and validated the system design and all major subsystems; we are now funded to scale up to the full Argus Array. This scale up involves the design and construction of the system’s external enclosure and tracking mount; the at-scale production of the telescope assemblies; construction of the array’s computing cluster, and the final assembly and commissioning of the Array. Major components of the Array, including the optical and sensor assemblies and the telescope cradle, will be manufactured by contractors under the lead engineer in collaboration with the systems engineer, the Argus Array Director and project team. Our project management philosophy emphasizes a small and local team; flat management structure; and a highly-collaborative working environment. We routinely produce prototypes and complex hardware in-house, and all team members can expect to perform significant hands-on engineering for Argus subsystems. The systems engineer will lead the validation of the Argus Array hardware subsystems, including the tracking and polar alignment drives, optical alignment systems, and laboratory and on-site testing. In collaboration with the lead engineer, the Argus systems engineer will also manage vendor oversight. This position involves working with the project team to evaluate the deployment sites currently being assessed in North America, the Chilean Andes, and the Canary Islands. The systems engineer will work with the lead engineer to manage construction, safety, quality management, risk, and project schedules. Additionally, the systems engineer will optimize the commissioning process for individual telescope units and develop and document efficient installation procedures to rapidly commission the 900-telescope Argus Array.
Minimum Education and Experience Requirements
PhD in astronomical instrumentation, physics or a related field
Required Qualifications, Competencies, and Experience
We are searching for a systems engineer with relevant experience in astronomical instrumentation, particularly in the construction of modular array telescopes. Leadership experience in complex technical projects is required.
Preferred Qualifications, Competencies, and Experience
Complex understanding of technology and electronics. Prior experience with working on complex modular systems is desirable. Someone who can solve problems efficiently in a collaborative environment Ability to iterate and improve designs as needed Ability to develop and deploy control systems on large clusters or edge computers Someone with an eye for detail, who can learn quickly and adapt to new surroundings and is highly motivated and enthusiastic about building a one-of-a-kind, world-class array telescope.
Special Physical/Mental Requirements
Travel to the Argus construction site will be required. Ability to sustain nighttime validations testing will be required at both the Argus site and at UNC.
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