Back to News
quantum-computing

Posdoc in Quantum Simulations of Curved Spacetime (Analogue Gravity) at at Seoul National University

Quantiki
Loading...
1 min read
0 likes
⚡ Quantum Brief
A postdoctoral position in quantum simulations of curved spacetime (analogue gravity) opens September 2026 under Prof. Uwe R. Fischer at Seoul National University’s Theory of Cold Atoms group. Candidates must demonstrate a strong publication record in analogue gravity, focusing on trans-Planckian physics, Hawking radiation, and quantum backreaction in sonic black holes. Research will explore information scrambling, Page curves of analogue black holes, and quasiparticle entanglement in curved spacetimes using ultracold quantum matter. Additional topics include quantum metrology in curved spacetime and gravitational wave detection via cold-atom systems, bridging quantum physics and general relativity. Applications close August 1, 2026. Details are available via the group’s official webpage.
Posdoc in Quantum Simulations of Curved Spacetime (Analogue Gravity) at at Seoul National University

Summarize this article with:

Posdoc in Quantum Simulations of Curved Spacetime (Analogue Gravity) at at Seoul National University Application deadline: Saturday, August 1, 2026Research group: Theory of cold atomsEmployer web page: https://physics.snu.ac.kr/fischer/Job type: PostDocIn the Theory of Cold Atoms group of Prof. Uwe R. Fischer at Seoul National University, a Postdoc position is open from September 2026 in the broader context of simulations of curved spacetime (aka analogue gravity). A sizeable track record and publications in analogue gravity research is required. Topics include, but are not limited to, implementations of analogues of trans-Planckian physics in cosmology and in the Hawking radiation of sonic black holes, the quantum backreaction problem in Hawking radiation, information scrambling , the Page curve of analogue black holes, quasiparticle entanglement measures in curved spacetimes, quantum metrology in curved spacetime, and gravitational wave detection in ultracold quantum matter. Log in or register to post comments

Read Original

Tags

neutral-atom
quantum-sensing
quantum-investment
quantum-simulation

Source Information

Source: Quantiki