Job description
The Department of Physical Geography (Faculty of Geosciences) is searching for a PhD candidate as part of the project ‘Defining the role of Sublimating Ices in Mass Wasting across the Solar System’. This project combines satellite image interpretation and laboratory simulations in environmental chambers, that can simulate low atmospheric pressures and temperatures, to define for the first time the role of sublimating ices in mass wasting (e.g., landslides and mass flows) across various rocky bodies. In specific, Mars, Ceres, Mercury, Vesta, Comets 67P and 9P, the Moon, and Earth are targeted. Are you interested in mountainous geomorphology, planets, and is the sky not the limit for you? Do you like performing experiments and working with satellite imagery? Do you have an interest in developing into a scientific researcher? Then this might be the job for you.
Mass wasting is one of the most abundant geomorphological processes in our solar system contributing immensely to surface evolution on planets, moons, comets, and asteroids. The mobility and morphology of mass-wasting deposits is affected by the presence and abundance of volatiles, for example water and carbon dioxide. By deciphering the formative processes of mass-wasting deposits and the role of volatiles therein we can thus identify where and when volatiles have been present in our Solar System, which has key implications for the search of life in the Solar System. However, landforms on rocky bodies in the solar system may be similar in appearance to those found on Earth, but may in fact be formed by disparate and so-far unknown processes. Therefore, extra-terrestrial landforms assumed to be created by liquid water may be formed by process-volatile interactions unknown to Earth. Sublimation is often hypothesized to play a key role in shaping the surfaces of extra-terrestrial bodies, but the lack of terrestrial analogues has hampered our ability to recognize sublimation-formed landforms.
We have discovered a new way to study sublimation-driven mass wasting under extra-terrestrial conditions in a laboratory flume emplaced in a pressure chamber. This gives us the unique possibility to create scale models under extra-terrestrial conditions and quantify mobility and morphology of sublimation-driven mass-wasting processes. We can then compare these
to mass-wasting deposits observed on terrestrial planets, moons, comets, and asteroids in our Solar System. This will fill a key knowledge gap in our understanding of extra-terrestrial landscapes, for the first time providing the urgently-needed knowledge, which could lead to fundamental reinterpretations of extra-terrestrial landforms. In the longer term it may aid better planning of future planetary observations and exploration of the Solar System.
What will you be doing?
You will quantify and compare the mobility and morphology of mass-wasting deposits across our Solar System, developing a unique comparison between mass-wasting in various extra-terrestrial environments. In addition, you will create an experimental dataset of sublimation-driven mass-wasting under a range of (extra)terrestrial atmospheric pressures and temperatures. Experimental setups will be developed and tested at Utrecht University, and will be employed at the environmental chambers at the Open University (UK) and/or Aarhus University (Denmark). Combining the satellite image analyses with the experimental results, you will then infer by quantitative comparison on which rocky bodies in our solar system mass-wasting deposits may have formed by sublimating ices. You will work closely together with your supervisors, other researchers from the department and international collaborators. Also, as a PhD candidate at Utrecht University you will follow courses and attend conferences as part of your own academic and personal development. You will also assist in teaching courses at Bachelor's and Master's level at our faculty. Both activities amount to approximately 10% of the contracted time.
Employer
A better future for everyone. This ambition motivates our scientists in executing their leading research and inspiring teaching. At
Utrecht University, the various disciplines collaborate intensively towards major societal themes. Our focus is on Dynamics of Youth, Institutions for Open Societies, Life Sciences and Sustainability.
Utrecht University's
Faculty of Geosciences studies the Earth: from the Earth's core to its surface, including man's spatial and material utilisation of the Earth - always with a focus on sustainability and innovation. With 3,400 students (BSc and MSc) and 720 staff, the Faculty is a strong and challenging organisation. The Faculty of Geosciences is organised in four Departments: Earth Sciences, Human Geography & Spatial Planning, Physical Geography, and Sustainable Development and is located at
Utrecht Science Park in the
Vening Meinesz building A near the historical city centre of Utrecht.
The team of the
Department of Physical Geography excels in research and education on BSc, MSc and PhD level. We research processes, patterns and dynamics of Earth’s systems from the mountains to the sea, and the interaction in between. This knowledge is essential for the sustainable management of our planet and to guarantee the availability of resources for the next generations. We are a lively department that hosts an active PhD candidate community of more than thirty PhD students. Will you join our team?