PhD Studentship in SNO+ neutrinoless double beta decay (2017)

A fully funded studentship on the SNO+ experiment is available to UK and EU nationals for a September 2017 start.

The University of Sussex Experimental Particle Physics group plays a critically important role in a number of experiments at the frontiers of our knowledge of particle physics, with main involvement in: the ATLAS experiment and its upgrades at the CERN Large Hadron Collider, the SNO+ neutrinoless double beta decay experiment at SNOLAB (Canada), the NOvA and DUNE neutrino oscillation experiments at Fermilab (USA), and the Neutron EDM experiment at PSI (Switzerland).

The SNO+ group at Sussex leads the overall calibration effort and is actively involved in several analysis groups: neutrinoless double-beta decay, supernova neutrinos, reactor neutrinos, as well as exotic physics searches in the water phase. The SNO+ experiment consists of three phases: a short six month water phase, followed by a similar length phase where the detector will be filled with pure liquid scintillator. These two phases are crucial to the calibration of the detector, but also present unique physics opportunities. After this, the main phase of SNO+ will start, where the scintillator is loaded with the double-beta decay element to search for neutrinoless double-beta decay. Observation of this process will give us unique insight in the fundamental properties of the neutrino particle. The successful candidate is expected to start during an exciting time: in the transition between water and pure scintillator, and will be expected to focus on the neutrinoless double-beta decay search. At the same time, he/she will spend a significant amount of time on the calibration of the experiment. This will put him/her in an ideal position to lead the analysis and optimise the detector's sensitivity to the possible discovery of neutrinoless double-beta decay.

What you get

£14553 (2017-18) per annum tax-free bursary and waiver of UK/EU fees each year for 3.5 years. Full-time study

Type of award

Postgraduate Research

Eligibility

Applicants should hold, or expect to hold, a UK undergraduate degree in physics or a related subject. Due to funding restrictions, the studentship is open to UK and EU resident students only. If you are based in the EU, please read the University's statement for applicants on fees for EU students as a result of the British vote to leave the EU.

If you are from outside Europe, you may apply for a non-funded position in the group, however, you will need to have a funding source for tuition fees and living expenses

Deadline

31 August 2017 23:59

How to apply

Apply through the Sussex on-line system

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/pg/applying

Please state in the Finance section of the online form that you are applying for the STFC/University funded studentship supervised by Dr Simon Peeters.

Applications should include a CV, as well as transcripts of marks obtained on your degree(s) and the names and contact details of two academic referees. Please also include an overview of why you are suitable for this position and your reasons for applying.

Sponsors

This is a full-time studentship. With agreement of the supervisor the student may take on a limited amount of teaching, for which additional payment will be made.

The award includes an additional training grant of £1650 p.a. for short courses, books, travel, conferences etc.

The Experimental Particle Physics Group research webpages can be found here:

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/epp/

Contact us

For additional information about the project, please contact Dr Simon Peeters

For practical questions about the application process and/or eligibility for funding, please contact: mpsresearchsupport@sussex.ac.uk

Timetable

Early application is advised. The studentship will be allocated as soon as a suitable candidate is found.

Start date at Sussex: 25th September 2017

First payment of the award bursary: 1st October 2017

Availability

At level(s):
PG (research)

Application deadline:
31 August 2017 23:59 (GMT)
the deadline has now expired