Publisher
source

Tamsin Edwards

Top university

7 months ago

Land ice contribution to sea level rise King’s College London in United Kingdom

Degree Level

Postdoc

Field of study

Computer Science

Funding

Full funding available

Deadline

December 31, 2026
Country flag

Country

United Kingdom

University

King’s College London

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Where to contact

Official Email

Keywords

Computer Science
Environmental Science
Geography
Glaciology
Climate Science
Earth Science
Gaussian Processes
Mitigation
Climate Resilience
Sea Level
Ice Sheet
Machine learning

About this position


About us

The School of Global Affairs (SGA) is a dynamic hub of multi-disciplinary scholarship that seeks to address the most pressing issues facing our world today.

At King’s, we are deeply committed to embedding good equality and diversity practices into all our activities so that the university is an inclusive, welcoming, and inspiring place to work and study, regardless of age, disability, gender reassignment, marital status, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation. King’s offers inclusive benefits to staff, including flexible working, Enhanced Parental Leave, funds for Parents and Carers, and the potential to join community staff networks.

About the role

You will join a team of climate scientists and artificial intelligence experts to generate new projections of the land ice contribution to sea level rise until 2300 with machine learning.

You will develop probabilistic machine learning “emulators” of multiple ice sheet and glacier models, based on large ensembles of simulations extending to 2300.

The simulations will be from two international projects aiming to inform the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Seventh Assessment Report (AR7): PROTECT (EU Horizon 2020), which has produced thousands of ice sheet and glacier simulations, and ISMIP7 (Ice Sheet Model Intercomparison Project for CMIP7), which will have new ice sheet simulations in 2026. You will use your emulators to make projections of the ice sheet and glacier contributions to global mean sea level to 2300, calibrate these projections with observational data, and compare the results with those from other emulators of similar datasets (e.g. Gaussian Process methods by the project lead). These results will inform the IPCC AR7, and adaptation and mitigation policymaking by other global stakeholders.

You will be based in the Department of Geography and responsible to Prof Tamsin Edwards (line manager and project lead) and Dr Alex Bradley (first supervisor), working with Dr David Watson (Department of Informatics). This position is funded by King’s Climate and Sustainability.

The key responsibilities of the role are to develop machine learning emulators of multiple ice sheet and glacier models, using ensembles of simulations, in collaboration with the project scientists, with the purpose of delivering projections for the land ice contribution to global mean sea level rise to 2300.

This also includes: writing up this research for publication in leading international journals; disseminating research results through conference presentations; and communicating research results to relevant stakeholders.

This post will be offered on a fixed term contract for 12 months from the day you start.


Funding details

Full funding including tuition fees and living expenses is available for this position. The scholarship covers all educational costs and provides a monthly stipend.

How to apply

Please submit your application including a cover letter, CV, academic transcripts, and contact information for two references. Applications should be sent via the online portal before the deadline.

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