The RIT’s Center for Computational Relativity and Gravitation (CCRG) is 
currently seeking to fill two postdoctoral research positions, including a 
senior postdoctoral fellowship in gravitational wave astronomy, as part of 
several NASA and NSF collaborative projects, including a new large NASA 
Theoretical and Computational Astrophysics Network grant. 

We are looking for highly qualified individuals interested in pursuing research 
in the fields of numerical relativity, theoretical and computational 
astrophysics, with an emphasis on general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics 
simulations of compact object mergers, such as accreting binary, massive, black 
holes and binary neutron stars.  

Accreting supermassive binary black holes are promising multi-messenger sources 
because they strongly emit both gravitational wave and electromagnetic 
radiation. It is the goal of our group to combine astrophysical knowledge about 
the environments of these sources with detailed physical simulations of gas 
flows in the immediate neighborhoods of these binaries as they proceed from 
large orbital separations through the merger proper and postmerger, and to 
predict the signals observers would see to identify them.   

Similarly, we are interested on pushing the frontiers in developing new 
high-performance algorithms that will allow us to perform long-term simulations 
neutron star coalescences from prior to merger through to the formation of 
disks and/or collapse of the merged remnant, the production of jets, and 
launching of outflows. 

The group is actively developing new numerical codes and tools (e.g. AsterX, 
SpacetimeX SphericalNR, Harm3D, PWMHD) as part of The Einstein Toolkit 
Consortium. The CCRG hosts a number of research scientists and students 
involved in gravitational wave data analysis from the LIGO Scientific 
Collaboration and the LISA consortium, and collaborate closely with the larger 
astrophysics group of observational astronomers gathering data from the Vera 
Rubin Observatory, Nanograv and JWST. 

Our researchers have access to some of the largest supercomputers in the world 
available at national computing centers such as the TACC’s Frontera 
Supercomputer and OLCF’ Frontiers exascale GPU-system. Additionally, the CCRG 
and RIT research computing provide our group exclusive access to several 
computer clusters with thousands of CPU cores and petabytes of storage.

Applications should consist of a cover letter, a brief statement of research 
interests, a curriculum vitae including publication list, and at least three 
letters of recommendation. All materials should be sent electronically as soon 
as possible to: mxcsma[AT]rit.edu with a copy to ccrg-postdoc[AT]ccrg.rit.edu. 
More information about the CCRG is available at http://ccrg.rit.edu/. And about 
Rochester at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rochester,_New_York

We are looking forward to hearing from you!

Manuela Campanelli, PhD

Distinguished Professor — Astrophysical Sciences & Technology, Mathematics & 
Statistics, 
Director — RIT’s Center for Computational Relativity & Gravitation;
Rochester Institute of Technology;
170 Lomb Memorial Dr.
Rochester NY, 14623

585 475 7752 (Office) 
956 345 1580 (Cell) 
[email protected]
[email protected]
rit.zoom.us/my/mxcsma
ORCID: 0000-0002-8659-6591

Senior Staff Specialist: Wenli Chen; [email protected]; 585-475-5298
ccrg.rit.edu

"The time will come when men such as I will look upon the murder of animals as 
they now look on the murder of men." -- Leonardo Da Vinci
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