Fwd: Flatiron Research Fellowships at the Center for Computational Mathematics

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Radu Victor Balan

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Oct 7, 2024, 9:36:59 AM10/7/24
to math-job...@umd.edu


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Luke Evans <lev...@flatironinstitute.org>
Date: Mon, Oct 7, 2024, 9:06 AM
Subject: Fwd: Flatiron Research Fellowships at the Center for Computational Mathematics
To: rvb...@umd.edu <rvb...@umd.edu>
Cc: jsa...@umd.edu <jsa...@umd.edu>



Hi Radu,

Hope you are doing well!

Wanted to let you know that the math division at the Flatiron institute is sending out application materials for the fall and I think AMSC has a lot of students who would fit well for the various research groups here, forwarding this along.

Best,
Luke
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Pilar Cossio <pco...@flatironinstitute.org>
Date: Fri, Oct 4, 2024 at 2:48 PM
Subject: Flatiron Research Fellowships at the Center for Computational Mathematics
To: Pilar Cossio <pco...@flatironinstitute.org>


Dear Colleagues,

Please forward the below to your mentees and other young computational scientists you think might be interested in the following position:

We are accepting applications for Flatiron Research Fellowships (FRF), typically 3-year postdoctoral positions, at the Center for Computational Mathematics (CCM) in the Flatiron Institute, a division of the Simons Foundation, located in New York City.

Deadline: December 15, 2024.
Full description and application:  https://apply.interfolio.com/155357

The research areas of interest align with those of the staff at CCM, and include: computational physics (including statistical mechanics, biophysics, fluid mechanics, quantum physics, and molecular dynamics); numerical methods for partial differential equations and integral equations; machine learning, especially the areas of optimization, learning theory, probabilistic modeling, deep learning, and high dimensional data analysis, as well as applications of scientific interest at Flatiron (e.g., cosmological modeling, quantum many-body systems, computational neuroscience); statistical methodology, modeling, and inference; probabilistic and differential programming; signal and image processing (with a particular focus on cryo-electron microscopy); numerical analysis, including numerical linear algebra and high-order methods; high performance computing and scientific software libraries.

A major goal of CCM is to develop the next generation of simulation and analysis methods and to make them available to the scientific community. For a full description of CCM activities and scientific staff, see: https://www.simonsfoundation.org/flatiron/center-for-computational-mathematics

Feel free to contact me with any questions.

Pilar 
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