
Career Opportunities
Krimigis Postdoctoral Scholars Program
About the Program
The Krimigis Postdoctoral Scholars Program at APL provides extraordinary scientists with the opportunity to engage in cutting-edge projects designed to advance the future of space science.
When you join us, you become part of a community of experts expanding the frontiers of space science and technology. APL has designed, built, operated, and led more than 70 spacecraft missions to explore the solar system and more than 325 specialized instruments to better understand our place among the stars. Our scientists and engineers are leading and developing initiatives that will facilitate the exploration of the Moon and that could define the future of space exploration.
Postdoctoral scholars in this program receive competitive pay, a generous benefits package, and networking opportunities within their cohort and among other researchers at APL.
This is a two-year program, with the option for a third year. Most positions will be for full-time work, although part-time work is possible by participant’s request.
Program alumni are encouraged to apply for other open opportunities at APL at the conclusion of their term.
Key Features

Mentorship
Mentorship from a research advisor to help you further develop as a researcher and science professional

Travel
Support for travel to conferences and to publish research

Training
Training in soft professional skills, such as proposal writing

Leadership
Ability to submit grant proposals as a principal investigator
Eligibility
To be considered for the program, applicants must meet the following requirements.
- A Ph.D. in a relevant subject awarded within the last three years (adjusted to account for any leaves of absence taken)
- Demonstrated ability to do independent research (must have work published or submitted for publication prior to the expected start date)
- Ability to work well within a team
How to Apply
Interested individuals should identify at least one available project (listed below) that they are interested in.
A limited number of Krimigis Postdoctoral Scholars will be selected to pursue postdoc-defined research during the program in addition to project-related work.
Applications must include the following:
- A current curriculum vitae (CV)
- A current unofficial graduate school transcript
- A cover letter that:
- includes a summary of the applicant’s dissertation work
- states which project(s) they are interested in
- provides the names and contact information for at least two references
- A three-page research proposal; the research proposal should include a statement of the problem, an outline of the proposed methodology, and the expected outcomes and their significance.
There are two application cycles each year. This current cycle has an application deadline of April 15, 2025.
Available Projects
- Interaction of the solar wind with the interstellar medium. Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) is a revolutionary mission that simultaneously investigates two of the most important overarching issues in heliophysics—the acceleration of energetic particles and the interaction of the solar wind with the local interstellar medium. This project will consist of analyzing IMAP data to support these overarching science objectives.
- Coronal physics. Parker Solar Probe is a scientific mission to unlock the mysteries of the Sun’s corona and solar wind by tracing the flow of energy to explore heating and what accelerates the solar wind. This project will consist of analyzing in situ Parker Solar Probe data to support these overarching science objectives.
- Novel measuring techniques of coronal dynamics. Coronagraphs provide insight into the solar corona. The project is to develop methodologies for the analysis of high-cadence data from the ASPIICS (Association of Spacecraft for Polarimetry and Imaging Investigation of the Corona of the Sun) and other coronagraphs to capture shock formation in the inner corona. There will also be a focus on development of new instrumentation.
- Information theory. Information theory is a powerful tool for determining linear and non-linear correlations, causalities, model-data comparisons, and machine learning. This position will apply information theory to analyze time series observational and simulation data for many different applications. In particular, this opportunity will include studying the solar dynamo, Earth’s ionospheric scintillation, solar wind interactions with Earth’s magnetosphere, and plasma transport at Saturn.
- Uranian moons: Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, and Oberon. This project will focus on geological interpretation using images collected by Voyager 2, including a variety of modeling tasks to understand volatile migration, landscape evolution, and cryovolcanism on these moons.
Impact

Space Science and Engineering
Since the dawn of the Space Age, APL has expanded the frontiers of space science and technology. We took the first picture of Earth from space, invented satellite navigation, dispatched spacecraft across the solar system, and demonstrated technology to advance our nation’s security.
About Stamatios “Tom” Krimigis
This program is named for Stamatios “Tom” Krimigis, a visionary space scientist, inventor, leader, and mentor. Krimigis is the only scientist in the world who built instrumentation for and/or participated in space science missions to all nine classical planets and the Sun. He served as a science instrument principal investigator on five NASA missions, including the legendary Voyager missions and the Cassini orbiter to Saturn. Over the course of his career, Krimigis has designed, built, flown, and analyzed data from 21 instruments on various NASA and European Space Agency missions. He was also instrumental in establishing NASA’s principal-investigator-led approach to space science, including the creation of the Discovery and New Frontiers programs. He has published over 640 papers in peer-reviewed journals and books and has been cited over 27,000 times.
Born in Greece, Krimigis earned a bachelor’s degree in physics from the University of Minnesota and a master’s and doctorate in physics from the University of Iowa, studying under James Van Allen, the former APL scientist who discovered Earth’s radiation belts. He served on the faculty of the Physics and Astronomy Department at the University of Iowa before joining APL in 1968. During his time at APL, he headed the Space Physics and Instrumentation Group, became chief scientist in 1980, and became head of the Space Department (now the Space Exploration Sector) in 1991. In that role for more than a decade, Krimigis directed the activities of hundreds of scientists and engineers with a focus on space science and engineering.


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