| Location: | Guildford |
|---|---|
| Salary: | £37,694 to £41,064 per annum |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
| Placed On: | 14th May 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 26th May 2026 |
| Job Ref: | 020026 |
University of Surrey is a global community of ideas and people, dedicated to life-changing education and research.
We are ambitious and have a bold vision of what we want to achieve shaping ourselves into one of the best universities in the world, which we are achieving through the talents and endeavour of every employee.
Our culture empowers people to achieve this aim and to collectively and individually make a real difference.
The role
We seek a creative researcher to join the 3-year STFC-funded project The Stellar Chemical Blueprint of the Early Universe, led by Dr Robert Izzard at Surrey with Professor Chiaki Kobayashi at Hertfordshire. JWST has revealed young, high-redshift, low-metallicity galaxies with compositions unlike those in the local Universe, including nitrogen enhanced by around a factor of ten and, in some systems, enhanced carbon. These discoveries challenge current models of stellar evolution, nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution. The project asks: which stars made the first chemical elements in the earliest galaxies, and how did they do so rapidly enough to explain the JWST data?
The successful candidate will work at the interface of stellar evolution, population nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution. They will develop and use low- and zero-metallicity models of single, binary, AGB, massive and very-massive stars to predict carbon, nitrogen and oxygen yields, test binary interactions and uncertain input physics including mass loss, nuclear reaction rates and interpolation methods, and determine which sources reproduce early-galaxy abundance patterns. 1 The role will involve extending the open-source binary_c rapid population synthesis code and MINT interpolation framework; developing stellar-evolution grids; modelling yields across a wide mass range; incorporating yields into 1D and 3D galactic chemical evolution simulations; and comparing predictions with JWST observations and forthcoming DESI, MOONS and PFS data. The successful candidate will publish in journals, present at meetings, contribute to BRIDGCE and participate in the research culture of the Astrophysics Group at Surrey. This is a fixed-term, full-time position for three years.
About you
You will have:
We recognise that candidates may come from different research backgrounds. You do not need to have worked previously on every aspect of stellar evolution, binary stars and galactic chemical evolution, but you should be motivated to develop expertise across these areas as part of the project.
How to apply
Applications should be submitted online via the University of Surrey jobs portal.
Please include:
Interviews are expected to take place in June 2026, either in person or online.
Informal enquiries are welcome and should be directed to Dr Robert Izzard at r.izzard@surrey.ac.uk.
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