KSETA Doctoral FellowFull PhD
- Working Language
- English
- Location
- Karlsruhe
- Application Deadline
- 09 Feb 2025
- Starting Date
- 01 Jul 2025
Content Navigation
Overview
Open Positions
2
Time Span
01 Jul 2025 for 3 years
Application Deadline
09 Feb 2025
Financing
yes
Type of Position
Full PhD
Working Language
English
Required Degree
Master
Areas of study
Physics, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering
Description
Description
The „Karlsruhe School of Elementary Particle and Astroparticle Physics: Science and Technology (KSETA)“ is the Doctoral School of the KIT Center Elementary Particle and Astroparticle Physics (KCETA) at KIT (Germany). KSETA is now accepting applications for doctoral researcher positions starting in July 2025 or later. Our PhD program leads to a doctoral degree in physics, informatics, electrical engineering or chemical process engineering.
With more than 300 scientists, KCETA combines the research activities of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) in theoretical and experimental elementary particle and astroparticle physics and is one of Europe’s leading institutions in these fields. KSETA offers an inspiring interdisciplinary research environment involving the fields of cosmic ray physics, neutrino astronomy, dark matter, quantum field theory, experimental and theoretical collider physics, experimental and theoretical flavour physics, neutrino physics computational physics and accelerator research as well as the development of sophisticated analysis techniques and modern technologies such as superconducting quantum sensors for applications in particle and astroparticle physics, superconducting electronics for ultra-low noise detector readout, semiconductor analogue and digital electronics, modern detector technologies, gravitational waves technology, optical transmission technology and parallel signal processing on GPUs.
We contribute to large-scale research projects such as Pierre Auger Observatory, Belle II, CMS, LHCb, FCC-ee, LUXE, Mu3e, ECHo, XENONnT, DELight, IceCube Neutrino Observatory, KATRIN and DARWIN, as well as the German Tier-1 grid computing center GridKa (see also www.kseta.kit.edu).
The doctoral school provides an attractive research environment, with subjects for doctoral theses at the intersections of experimental and theoretical particle and astroparticle physics as well as engineering, in particular in the areas of electronics, detector instrumentation, sensor technology, computer science, data management and data analysis. The school complements this with an individually tailored course program for both physicists and engineers.
A Master’s degree in physics, electronic engineering, computer science or other related discipline qualifying for research at KSETA is required by the time of appointment to the position of doctoral researcher. In addition, applicants should not have a PhD yet and are in their first four years after their Master’s degree. Please register prior to application at http://www.kseta.kit.edu/application.php
Further information about the application procedure, available research topics, subjects for doctoral dissertations and the KSETA principal investigators can be found at http://www.kseta.kit.edu.
The PhD positions at KSETA are awarded once per year. The next closing date for applications is February 9, 2025. Documents received after the deadline will only be considered in the following application period.
Funding will be provided through employment contracts.
Required Documents
Required Documents
- Motivation letter
- CV
- Certificates
- List of publications
- References