Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant position with the WISDOM project (mm/sub-mm interferometric studies of molecular gas and supermassive black holes in galaxies near and far; strong gravitational lensing).
Under the supervision of Prof. Martin Bureau, the postholder will primarily work with the international WISDOM team on high spatial resolution (~10 pc) ALMA studies of the molecular ISM of galaxies, with a focus on galaxy centres. In particular, this project aims to measure the spatially resolved properties of giant molecular clouds and/or weigh the supermassive black holes lurking at galaxy centres using molecular gas dynamics, this for both nearby and distant (using strong gravitational lensing) galaxies.
Candidates working on any aspect of WISDOM will be considered, including molecular clouds (properties, formation, evolution), dynamics (supermassive black hole mass measurements, gas flows, active galactic nucleus feedback), and any other facets of the data not yet exploited. However, the selected candidate will preferentially play a leading role in i) measuring the spatially-resolved properties of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in nearby galaxies, both using and further developing formalisms for their interpretation (GMC structure, dynamical state, lifetime, formation, evolution), and/or ii) weighing the supermassive black holes lurking at galaxy centres using molecular gas dynamics and (at intermediate redshifts) strong gravitational lensing, thus preserving and extending the team’s lead in this field.
Applicants should have a PhD (or close to completion) in (Astro) physics or a related field. The candidate should also have a strong background in galaxy dynamics, interstellar medium, and star formation via mm/sub-mm interferometry. Candidates are expected to have a proven record of academic research (creativity, thoroughness, and assiduity), the capacity for independent work, the ability to work and interact positively with colleagues and the team, a demonstrated ability for data analysis/scientific computing, and excellent decision-making, problem-solving, planning, and organisational skills.
The post is full time and fixed term until 30 June 2028.
The closing date for applications is noon UK time on Monday, 1 September 2025
As part of the online application, you will be asked to upload a supporting statement (maximum 1 page), a CV (including a publications list), and a statement about your (past, current, and future) research interests (maximum 3 pages), and to provide details of three referees. You should also arrange for a reference letter from each of the nominated referees to be sent to
Leanne O’Donnell (leanne.odonnell@physics.ox.ac.uk) by the closing date.