Scientific Software Engineer vacancy at Roxar

Written by Rachel Furner
June 7, 2017

Roxar is part of the Emerson group of companies, producing software for the oil and gas exploration and production industry. Their software is used worldwide to calculate flows of fluid underground and along the wells, and to assess the uncertainty when developing an oil or gas field.

The growing use of Roxar’s Tempest MORE reservoir simulator means they are expanding the development team in Oxford and are looking for a skilled scientific software engineer to research and develop numerical schemes to simulate underground fluid flow, build and test the code, and support end users in running the final commercial program.

The successful candidate will work as part of the development team on a range of projects. Possible projects might be to simulate advanced wells, improve the performance of the core solvers, or modelling more advanced physical processes such as carbon dioxide injection. In all cases an efficient, parallel implementation of the ensuing algorithms is critical to take advantage of parallel hardware and emerging computing architectures, as is the ability to write clear and maintainable code.

Person Specification:

The successful candidate will have:

  • Strong physics, maths or engineering skills at PhD level, possibly with some post-doctoral experience
  • Excellent programming skills in a high-level language such as C++
  • Aptitude for software engineering as part of a development team
  • Interest in helping real-world engineers

In addition, experience in the following areas would be advantageous:

  • Modelling fluid flow in porous media
  • Working on large or commercial numerical codes
  • Parallel architectures and libraries (e.g. MPI, multi-threading, CUDA)
  • Software development lifecycle and testing

For more information please contact Kari Hansen karirosnes.hansen@emerson.com.

For more details on Roxar visit www.roxarsoftware.com

Closing date: 31st July 2017.

Please note this position is in no way connected to the CCIMI