Postdoctoral Researcher in convection and aerosols through satellite based remote sensing

Economicsnetwork
Oxford
4 weeks ago
Create job alert

Postdoctoral Researcher in convection and aerosols through satellite based remote sensing### University of Oxford - Atmospheric Physics| | || --- | --- || Location: | Oxford || Salary: | £39,424 to £47,779 per annum || Hours: | Full Time || Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract || | || --- | --- || Placed On: | 22nd December 2025 || Closes: | 30th January 2026 || Job Ref: | 184052 |Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral researcher in convection and aerosol research with satellite based remote sensing.This position, part of the EU Horizon Europe project Clouds and climate transitioning to post-fossil aerosol regime (CleanCloud) with partners across Europe, will advance our understanding convective systems under climate and air pollution changes.The focus will be on convection, aerosols, and their interactions, utilising satellite-based remote sensing. Potential areas of emphasis include cloud tracking and the analysis of data from the innovative EarthCARE satellite mission in combination with global km-scale models. Successful applicants will work closely with our national and international collaborators and are expected to develop innovative research approaches. The post-holder will have the opportunity to teach.Applicants should hold a PhD/DPhil, (or close to completion) in atmospheric physics or related fields. Experience in atmospheric physics and aatmospheric remote sensing. are essential as well as strong computing skills, including the knowledge of UNIX/Linux, Fortran, Python, or other high-level languages.The post is full time and fixed term for 18 months.The closing date for applications is **noon GMT on 30 January 2026.You will be required to upload a CV and Supporting Statement and details of two referees, as part of your online application. The Supporting Statement should include a cover letter and should also clearly describe how you meet each of the selection criteria listed in the job description. Referees are also required to submit their references to Heather Waller: by the closing date.****Share on social mediaWe value your feedback on the quality of our adverts.If you have a comment to make about the overall quality of this advert,or its categorisation then please##### Advert informationType / Role:****Subject Area(s):****Location(s):**jobs.ac.uk has been optimised for the latest browsers.For the best user experience, we recommend viewing jobs.ac.uk on one of the following:

#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Postdoctoral Researcher in convection and aerosols through satellite based remote sensing

Postdoctoral Researcher in convection and aerosols through satellite based remote sensing

Postdoc: Satellite Remote Sensing of Convection & Aerosols

Postdoc: Convection & Aerosols via Satellite Remote Sensing

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

UK Space Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

The UK space sector is no longer a niche reserved for astronauts and rocket scientists. It is a broad, fast-growing industry covering satellites, Earth observation, navigation, telecoms, space data, launch services, space sustainability and defence-related capability. That breadth creates genuine career opportunities for professionals switching careers in their 30s, 40s or 50s — especially in roles where delivery, quality, operations, safety, regulation and customer outcomes matter as much as pure engineering. This article gives you a UK reality check: what space jobs actually look like, which roles are realistic for career switchers, what skills UK employers value, how long retraining tends to take and whether age is a barrier (usually far less than people fear).

How to Write a Space Industry Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

The UK space sector is growing rapidly. From satellite manufacturing and launch services to Earth observation, space data, communications and downstream applications, organisations across the UK are hiring engineers, scientists, software specialists and operations professionals to support increasingly complex space missions. Yet many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Space industry job adverts often receive very few applications, or attract candidates whose experience does not align with the realities of space programmes. At the same time, experienced space professionals frequently ignore adverts that feel vague, over-ambitious or disconnected from how space projects actually operate. In most cases, the issue is not a lack of talent — it is the clarity and quality of the job advert. Space professionals are systems-focused, risk-aware and highly selective. A poorly written job ad signals weak programme maturity and unrealistic expectations. A clear, well-written one signals credibility, technical seriousness and long-term intent. This guide explains how to write a space industry job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and positions your organisation as a credible employer in the UK space sector.

Maths for Space Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

UK space careers can look intimidating from the outside. Job adverts mention “systems engineering” “mission assurance” “GN&C” “RF” “payloads” “flight dynamics” “verification” “ECSS” & suddenly you’re wondering if you need a maths degree just to apply. You don’t. For most UK space jobs, the maths you actually use clusters into a handful of practical topics that map directly to real work across satellites, launch, ground segment, downstream data, mission ops & space software. This article strips it down to what matters most for job readiness plus a 6-week learning plan, portfolio projects & a resources section you can use immediately. UK space is also actively focused on growth & skills. The government’s National Space Strategy sets ambitions to grow the UK’s space ecosystem & spread employment across the UK. The Space Sector Skills Survey 2023 highlights recruitment challenges plus the importance of new skills & technologies including AI & ML. Recent industry reporting also estimates UK space industry employment at 55,550 FTEs plus wider supply-chain jobs. So learning the right maths is not an academic exercise. It’s a practical way to widen the roles you can credibly target.