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Job ID: 261149

INESC TEC | Researcher (AE2025-0358)
INESC TEC

Research Opportunities

Computer Science

Work description

The work plan falls within the scope of the project supporting the European supercomputing infrastructure, with the participation of INESCTEC. The main focus is work plan is to support users of supercomputing infrastructures, especially in the optimization and profiling of scientific applications in pre-exascale and exascale environments.

Academic Qualifications

National, foreigner and stateless candidates holding a master degree in Electrical and Computers , Computer Science, Physics, or related scientific area, and holders of a scientific and professional curriculum showing a relevant profile for the activity to be developed can apply for the tender.

Minimum profile required

Demonstrated competence and experience in the development of applications in C++, C, Fortran, and Python. Experience in

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Scientists have developed a lightning-fast AI tool called HEAT-ML that can spot hidden “safe zones” inside a fusion reactor where parts are protected from blistering plasma heat. Finding these areas, known as magnetic shadows, is key to keeping reactors running safely and moving fusion energy closer to reality.

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A workforce fluent in AI techniques will be essential to ensure U.S. leadership in artificial intelligence continues. Jeremy Waisome, an assistant professor at the University of Florida, discusses the Shark AI project, which has introduced artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques to thousands of middle school students.

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In-brief analysis

August 13, 2025

Even without accounting for electricity interruptions resulting from major events such as hurricanes, customers in Puerto Rico experienced on average 27 hours of power grid interruptions per year between 2021 and 2024. By comparison, electricity customers in the mainland United States generally experience about two hours of electricity interruptions per year without major events.

Hurricanes and other major events add to the outage time customers experience. In August 2024, Hurricane Ernesto affected at least 1 million customers in Puerto Rico. On average in 2024, customers in Puerto Rico went without electricity for more than 73 hours, of which 43 hours were attributed to major events such as hurricanes. In September 2022, Hurricane Fiona left all 1.5 million electricity customers in Puerto Rico without power. The average customer in Puerto Rico experienced almost

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