Doctoral Researcher in Quantum Simulation
Position Details (PhD Research Project)
The Department of Physicsis recruitinga motivatedDoctoral Researcher for a project on quantum simulation with ultracold atomic systems.The research will be guided by Assistant Professor Paolo Molignini at the Quantum Simulation Theory group at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. The position will start at the earliest on the 2nd of January 2026 or as agreed for a fixed term of 3,5 years.
The Quantum Simulation Theory group of Paolo Molignini, starting in January 2026, explores the physics of quantum many-body systems to push the boundaries of what is computable. The group focuses particularly on long-range and light-mediated interactions, combining theoretical modeling, advanced simulations, and machine learning to study emergent quantum phenomena in platforms such as ultracold atoms, molecules, and photonic devices. Its research develops new frameworks and computational tools to uncover non-equilibrium dynamics, entanglement propagation, and collective behavior in next-generation quantum simulators, bridging condensed matter, computational, and quantum information physics.
Research directions
Quantum simulators are revolutionizing our ability to understand strongly correlated and non-equilibrium physics. They are systems engineered to emulate complex quantum matter that is otherwise difficult or impossible to probe directly – for example with ultracold atoms, molecules, or photonic architectures. This PhD project will contribute to this rapidly evolving field by developing theoretical and computational tools to explore quantum many-body phenomena far beyond the reach of classical methods.
Topics of interest include:
- The development and application ofmulticonfigurational methods for interacting many-body fermions, with potential applications to dipolar fermions, cavity-mediated fermions, and strongly correlated continuum systems.
- Numerical simulations of ultracold bosonic systems featuring rotation, long-ranged interactions, or sudden quenches – probing phenomena such as supersolidity, the dynamics of quantum vortices, and possible analogies to neutron-star matter.
- Machine-learning-enhanced quantum simulation, including optimization of measurement protocols, regression of observables from single-shot data, and data-driven characterization of complex quantum phases.
These directions lie at the heart of next-generation quantum technologies and offer an ideal environment for a motivated PhD student to acquire cutting-edge expertise at the interface of quantum many-body theory, computational physics, and ultracold-atom experiments.
Major Duties/Responsibilities:
- Work as part of theQuantum Simulation Group conducting basic research that advances our understanding of ultracold long-range interacting and/or cavity-mediated atomic systems and their use in quantum simulation.
- Develop and apply theoretical and/or computational methods for the study of ultracold quantum simulators, including multiconfigurational models, exact diagonalization, lattice-continuum mapping models, and machine learning methods.
- When needed, use the outstanding computational facilities accessible to the group: either the University of Jyväskylä cluster, or the computational infrastructure and services of the nationalscientific computing centre CSC.
- Present research and publish scientific results in peer-reviewed journals in a timely fashion.
Who we are looking for
Department of Physics
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University of Jyvaskyla
On Campus (Full Time)
See Position Description
PhD Research Funding
Expired