Fixed Term Contract: End Date: up to 15 months from start date
Welsh Language: Not Applicable
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About the Role
Applications are invited for an STFC-funded PDRA position in the School of Physical Sciences at The Open University. Our research covers a wide range of Solar System science and exploration. We investigate the origin and evolution of the Solar System, through the physical, geological, chemical and biological processes that drive it. We use laboratory and space mission experiments, remote observation, environmental simulation and modelling to investigate the surfaces and atmospheres of the terrestrial planets, the Moon, asteroids, comets and extra-terrestrial materials.
The post-holder will be expected to work independently but will be part of an active Cosmochemistry Research Group (CRG). The project aims to quantitatively assess how important Ryugu and Bennu-type material is in the Near-Earth environment and to understand why it appears to be significantly underrepresented in present-day meteorite flux. To be effective in this role, the successful candidate will have a demonstrable prior research experience in reflectance spectroscopy (e.g., UV-ViS) of planetary bodies and/or working with geological/extra-terrestrial samples using standard petrological tools, such as SEM/EPMA, and a proven track-record of handling large and complex datasets (e.g. geochemical, spectroscopic) for understanding processes involved in the origin and evolution of the Solar System, as evidenced by relevant published work.
A successful outcome from this work will be a better understanding of whether primitive (e.g., CI-type) asteroidal material might be a much more important component in the near-Earth environment than has so far been considered. The extreme paucity of this material in the meteorite record may be a reflection of its intrinsic high porosity and resulting low strength, consistent with observations by Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS-REx missions. This work is analytically challenging, requiring significant skills and patience in manipulating rare and small samples, developing new reference materials and protocols as required and the ability to work independently as well as part of a team in a modern laboratory environment.
Key Responsibilities
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