nishakurian
5th May 2005, 11:12 AM
The Atmospheric Physics Group (Chair: Prof. U. Schmidt) at the Institut fuer Atmosphaere und Umwelt of the J.W. Goethe-University Frankfurt has for the earliest possible starting date an opening for a Ph.D. Student Assistant
The scientific scope of the research is stratospheric ozone depletion and its coupling with global climate change. The research is performed within a co-ordinated international project funded by the European Union (Integrated Project SCOUT-O3).
The successful candidate will join a team of scientists performing in situ trace gas measurements in the lower stratosphere and upper troposphere on board of Europe's only high altitude research aircraft (the "M-55 Geophysica")and from stratospheric balloons during upcoming field campaigns in Australia, West Africa and Northern Sweden.
The aircraft observations will be analyzed to examine stratosphere- troposphere exchange, to study chemical budgets and transport processes in the tropical tropopause region, and to quantify the large-scale transport in the stratosphere.
Required is a university degree equivalent to a German diploma in physics,
meteorology, chemistry, or a related natural science field. Furthermore are
desired: Experience with experimental techniques and programming, a background in atmospheric sciences, and good command of the English language. (Basic communication capability in German will be a plus.)
For further information and application details please visit our web
page:
http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/~mvolk/job_en.html (http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/~mvolk/job_en.html)
************************************************** ****************
C. Michael Volk, Ph.D.
Institut für Atmosphäre und Umwelt
Fach 194
J.W. Goethe-Universität Frankfurt Phone: +49-(0)69-798-28861
Georg Voigt Strasse 14 FAX:
+49-(0)69-798-28331
D-60325 Frankfurt am Main e-mail:
m.volk@meteor.uni-frankfurt.de (http://us.f313.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=m.volk@meteor.uni-frankfurt.de&YY=45923&order=down&sort=date&pos=0&view=a&head=b)
GERMANY
See our WWW site: http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/ (http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/)
************************************************** *****************
The scientific scope of the research is stratospheric ozone depletion and its coupling with global climate change. The research is performed within a co-ordinated international project funded by the European Union (Integrated Project SCOUT-O3).
The successful candidate will join a team of scientists performing in situ trace gas measurements in the lower stratosphere and upper troposphere on board of Europe's only high altitude research aircraft (the "M-55 Geophysica")and from stratospheric balloons during upcoming field campaigns in Australia, West Africa and Northern Sweden.
The aircraft observations will be analyzed to examine stratosphere- troposphere exchange, to study chemical budgets and transport processes in the tropical tropopause region, and to quantify the large-scale transport in the stratosphere.
Required is a university degree equivalent to a German diploma in physics,
meteorology, chemistry, or a related natural science field. Furthermore are
desired: Experience with experimental techniques and programming, a background in atmospheric sciences, and good command of the English language. (Basic communication capability in German will be a plus.)
For further information and application details please visit our web
page:
http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/~mvolk/job_en.html (http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/~mvolk/job_en.html)
************************************************** ****************
C. Michael Volk, Ph.D.
Institut für Atmosphäre und Umwelt
Fach 194
J.W. Goethe-Universität Frankfurt Phone: +49-(0)69-798-28861
Georg Voigt Strasse 14 FAX:
+49-(0)69-798-28331
D-60325 Frankfurt am Main e-mail:
m.volk@meteor.uni-frankfurt.de (http://us.f313.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=m.volk@meteor.uni-frankfurt.de&YY=45923&order=down&sort=date&pos=0&view=a&head=b)
GERMANY
See our WWW site: http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/ (http://www.meteor.uni-frankfurt.de/)
************************************************** *****************