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You probably know the field better than I, but when I was in the area I heard Stanford SLAC did some interesting work: https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/

I'm in a different (but also somewhat niche) field of engineering-for what it's worth my experience was that jobs in my field are rarely advertised and the really good scientific ones often aren't public at all, so I'd suggest identifying organizations doing interesting work and doing very targeted inquiries as opposed to a breadth search (which you may be doing already!)

Finally: Your CV is excellent, love the formatting. For your resume, the norm that I've encountered is that it should be compact. Especially for someone in the early stage of their career, I should be able to take a quick glance and sum up your accomplishments, and it's highly suggested that it be one page.

Good luck with the search!


Your PhD and associated research is not on your CV or resume? Plus, did you publish any papers? They may be more relevant than projects created in 2002 (18 years ago ...)


I am very puzzled by your comment. Please take the time to read my resume or CV. It is quite clearly written what my PhD is in and my research. It is also quite clear in my CV what research is in publication review and has been published. There is no reference anywhere to any work done "in 2002" or "18 years ago".


My mistake! It seems that when I download your CV and open it another PDF is loaded (also named CV.pdf).

Sorry to have caused the confusion and I probably should have realised the mistake given the different names on the CV!


You may have replied to the wrong comment.




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