Student Opportunities
-
PhD position: Polluted sites
assessment and mapping
The Department of Environmental Sciences and Land
Use Planning of the Université catholique de Louvain
(Belgium) is opening a position for a PhD student in
the field of spatial mapping and statistical
analysis techniques applied to soil polluted sites
assessment, in the framework of the EU FP7 research
project MODELPROBE (“Model driven Soil Probing, Site
Assessment and Evaluation”).
The PhD student will
contribute to the development and application of
spatial mapping techniques and statistical analysis
techniques with the aim of (i) assessing the
performances of various existing in-situ measurement
method (geophysics, biology, tree monitoring, etc.),
and (ii) applying data fusion techniques for the
spatial mapping and delineation of a contaminated
area.
The appointment will
be for a period of three years, starting October 1,
2008. The candidate should have a MSc Degree in
Civil or Agricultural and Environmental Engineering,
Statistics, Mathematics, Physics, or closely related
disciplines. Good knowledge of the Matlab
programming language is welcome. To apply, please
email your CV along with the names of two referees
to Professor Patrick Bogaert (patrick.bogaert@uclouvain.be),
Faculty of bioengineering.
Deadline for receipt of applications is
October 1, 2008. -
PhD studentship
in Hydrogeophysics Université catholique de Louvain
The Department of Environmental Sciences and Land
Use Planning of the Université catholique de Louvain
(Belgium) has openings for two PhD students in the
field of Applied Hydrogeophysics and Ground
Penetrating Radar, in the frame of the EU FP7
research project DIGISOIL (“Integrated system of
data collection technologies for mapping soil
properties”, involving 10 European partners). The
PhD students will contribute to the development and
application of advanced ground penetrating radar (GPR)
and electromagnetic induction
(EMI) techniques
for high-resolution, three-dimensional imaging of
the soil hydrogeophysical properties at the field
scale (digital soil mapping). The appointment will
be for a period of three years. The candidate should
have a MSc Degree in Civil or Agricultural and
Environmental Engineering, Applied Geophysics,
Physics, or related disciplines including Soil
Sciences and Hydrology. Good knowledge of
Electromagnetics is welcome.
To apply please email
your CV together with the names of two referees to
Professor Sébastien Lambot (sebastien.lambot@uclouvain.be).
Deadline for receipt of applications is
September 15, 2008.
-
Hydrogeophysics
PhD Studentship:
Lancaster University, UK. Applications are invited
for a 3 year funded PhD studentship in
Hydrogeophysics at Lancaster University. The
studentship will contribute to a larger
collaborative (US NSF funded) research project on
“Hydrogeophysical quantification of hydraulic
conductivity from electrical measurements of the
effective properties of porous media” which is led
by Lee Slater (Rutgers University) in collaboration
with Warren Barrash (Boise State University) and
André Revil (Colorado School of Mines).
There is growing interest in the potential use of
measurements of electrical polarisation for
field-scale mapping of hydraulic conductivity (e.g.
Kemna et al., 2004; Slater & Lesmes, 2002),
particularly given recent empirical evidence of
links between electrical spectra characteristics and
hydraulic conductivity (Binley et al., 2005). This
project is a multi-scale program of research
directed towards the quantification of hydraulic
conductivity from complex conductivity (σ*)
measurements on coarse alluvial deposits of the
Boise Hydrogeophysical Research Site (BHRS). The
proposal is motivated by our observation that σ*
provides quantitative measures of: (a) the
interconnected pore volume, and (b) the
interconnected pore surface area, controlling fluid
flow, that can be embedded into an Electrical-Kozeny
Carman (K-C-E) type equation for K prediction. The
project will employ a series of geophysical and
hydraulic experimental studies at the laboratory and
field scale. Laboratory scale experiments will
provide petrophysical relationships linking
electrical geophysical, physical and hydraulic
properties on sediments extracted from the field
site. Field scale measurements will include: single
hole and cross borehole electrical geophysical
surveys and multi-level slug tests.
The Lancaster PhD studentship will make use of
existing complex conductivity inversion tools
developed at Lancaster and focus on the development
of numerical schemes for deriving the spatial
distribution of hydraulic conductivity from the
hydraulic and geophysical data available. Two
strategies for inverting σ* datasets for tomographic
estimates of K are: (1) direct conversion of σ*
images to K images assuming a stationary K-C-E
equation, and (2) a structural inversion whereby the
K zonation is estimated without having to state a
single K-C-E relationship. These strategies will be
assessed via comparison with spatial K distribution
at the BHRS estimated from kriging of borehole-based
K measurements, as well as hydraulic tomography
datasets available from a separate project.
Candidates should have a good honours degree in
Geophysics, Earth Science, Environmental Science or
a related discipline. Experience of inverse
modelling or numerical modelling of electrical
and/or hydraulic potential fields would be an
advantage but are not necessary.
Deadline for applications is the 31st August
2008. Interviews will be held in September 2008 and
the studentship will start as soon as possible
thereafter.
For informal enquiries with regard to the research,
please contact Andrew Binley by e-mail (a.binley@lancaster.ac.uk).
For further information on making an application,
please contact Andy Harrod by email (lec.pg@lancaster.ac.uk)
or telephone (+44 (0)1524 593478).
-
PhD Position in
Applied Geophysics/Hydrogeophysics/Soil Science.
The Applied
Geophysics Group at University of Bonn has an
opening for a Ph.D. student on the recently funded
FP7 EU research project iSOIL (Interactions
between soil related sciences—linking geophysics,
soil science and digital soil mapping),
involving 19 partners from 9 European countries. The
appointment will be for a period of three years. The
Ph.D. work will focus on the use of the spectral
induced polarization (SIP) method for soil
characterization at the field scale. The ideal
candidate has a degree in applied geophysics, soil
sciences, or related discipline. Previous experience
with geoelectrical methods is preferred. Good
knowledge of English is essential, and a working
understanding of German is welcome. Research will be
conducted in close collaboration with project
partners at Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental
Research (UFZ) and University of Padua. To apply
please email your resume together with the names of
two referees to Professor Andreas Kemna
(application@geo.uni-bonn.de).
Deadline for receipt of applications is August 31, 2008.
|
To join
this Focus Group, log into the AGU through their
update member
record link. Under the "Membership Record" select "Near
Surface Geophysics" as your primary or "other" affiliation under
the "Areas of Scientific Interest" section.
Questions/comments to: Webmaster
|