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  • Creative Energy. Supercharged with Science.

    Accelerate your career with a new role at the nation's newest national laboratory. Here you can be part of a team exploring the building blocks of matter and lay the ground work for scientific discoveries that will reshape our understanding of the atomic nucleus. Join a community with a common purpose of solving the most challenging scientific and engineering problems of our time.

     

    Title Job ID Category Date Posted
    Project Services and Support Office Manager 13330 Management
    Hall A Technologist/Design Drafter 13285 Engineering
    Scientific Data and Computing Department Head 13383 Computer
    Software Administrator - Facilities Management/Integration 13395 Computer
    RadCon Manager 13337 Environmental Safety
    Master HVAC Technician 13367 Misc./Trades
    Survey and Alignment Technician (Metrology) 13385 Misc./Trades
    Magnet Group Staff Engineer 13370 Engineering
    High Throughput Computing (HTC) Hardware Engineer 13197 Computer
    ES&H Inspection Program Lead 13323 Environmental Safety
    CIS Postdoctoral Fellow 13102 Science
    Target Group Technician 13276 Misc./Trades
    Data Center Operations Manager 13327 Engineering
    Deputy CNI Manager 13378 Computer
    Project Controls Analyst 13302 Clerical/Admin
    HPDF Project Director 13373 Computer
    Hall D Electronics Technician 13334 Misc./Trades
    Business IT Portfolio Manager 13374 Computer
    IT Project Manager 13340 Clerical/Admin
    Lead Magnet Engineer 13366 Engineering
    SRF Accelerator Physicist 13359 Science
    Geant4 Developer 13214 Computer
    Electrical Engineer (Sustainability) 13364 Engineering
    Finance Business Manager 13365 Accounting
    DC Power Group Leader 13380 Engineering
    DC Power Systems Electrical Engineer 13371 Engineering
    ES&H Department Head 13338 Engineering
    Communications Office Student Intern 13310 Public Relations
    Storage Solutions Architect 13238 Computer
    Data Scientist Postdoc 13342 Science
    Magnet Group Mechanical/Electrical Designer 13388 Misc./Trades
    Mechanical Engineer III 13140 Engineering

    A career at Jefferson Lab is more than a job. You will be part of “big science” and work alongside top scientists and engineers from around the world unlocking the secrets of our visible universe. Managed by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC; Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility is entering an exciting period of mission growth and is seeking new team members ready to apply their skills and passion to have an impact. You could call it work, or you could call it a mission. We call it a challenge. We do things that will change the world.

    Welcome from Stuart Henderson, Lab Director
    Why choose Jefferson Lab
    • PASSION AND PURPOSE
      Middle School Science Bowl competitors huddle together to brainstorm the answer.
    • PASSION AND PURPOSE
      Local teachers share ideas for a classroom activity with other teachers during Teacher Night.
    • PASSION AND PURPOSE
      Two young learners hold up a model of the atom during Deaf Science Camp.
    • PASSION AND PURPOSE
      Staff Scientist Douglas Higinbotham snaps a selfie with some of the postdoc students he is mentoring.

    At Jefferson Lab we believe in giving back to our community and encouraging the next generation of scientists and engineers. Our staff reaches out to students to advance awareness and appreciation of the range of research carried out within the DOE national laboratory system, to increase interest in STEM careers for women and minorities, and to encourage everyone to become a part of the next-generation STEM workforce. We are recognized for our innovative programs like:

    • 1,500 students from 15 Title I schools engage in the Becoming Enthusiastic About Math and Science (BEAMS) program at the lab each school year.

    • 60 teachers are enrolled in the Jefferson Science Associates Activities for Teachers (JSAT) program at the lab inspiring 9,000 students annually.

    • 24 high school students have internships and 34 college students have mentorships at the lab.

       

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    Meet our people
    • Paul Vasilauskis, Accelerator Division

      A tinkerer from the Navy finds purpose at Jefferson Lab

      Paul Vasilauskis grew up in the South suburbs of Chicago riding his bike through miles of large abandoned farm fields rich with ponds, creeks and wooded areas. He devoured rows of books and magazines. “Popular Mechanics” and “Mechanics Illustrated” were his favorite. “I used to sit downstairs in the spare room and just read from the encyclopedia and old magazines especially anything that said ‘atomic’ or ‘nuclear’ in it,” he said. 

      But mostly, he was a tinkerer. Once, after exploring the warm glowing tubes inside his family’s television it would no longer turn on and when cross-examined by his parents later, claimed “I don’t know what happened, it just stopped working. I don’t think there was anything in the house I hadn’t torn apart to see how it worked,” Vasilauskis said.

      A young explorer

      Vasilauskis discovered his mechanical skills early and, with practice, they developed. His father, who worked for the United States Post Office, indirectly encouraged his son’s mechanical skills by providing him real-life opportunities to tinker. Vasilauskis recalled a moment when his father became frustrated with their “crotchety, old snow blower.”

      “He would get frustrated,” he said. “Then I would fuss with it, and I’d get it running.” As a high school student, Vasilauskis thrived in his computer programming class. At the time, he was working for a small business run by his friend’s family making small, plastic clocks for $3 an hour. “It was mindless, repetitive work,” he remembered. “I would be sitting there putting these clocks together but in my head, I would write my software programs.”

      By his senior year, he was ready to continue on with a second year of writing programs, but there were no system operators available at the start of the year to run them. “I was taught how to run an IBM 360 mainframe,” he said. This was his first exposure to being an operator, his second came from the Navy.

      From the Navy to Jefferson Lab

      After Vasilauskis graduated high school, he visited a recruiter for the United States Navy where his testing results revealed his natural talent for science and mechanics. After finishing the test, the recruiter put his arm around Vasilauskis and said, “Has anyone ever told you about our nuclear power program?” Vasilauskis was intrigued. He could learn how to operate a nuclear reactor at the age of 18, and said he was always on board for anything “science-y and technical.” He joined the Navy in 1981, and in 1990 he was transferred to Newport News where he attended an open house held at Jefferson Lab. He still has the poster from that visit. “I remember them showing us about the fabrication of the niobium cavities,” he said. “We got a tour of a very large and empty hall. In that hall was a mock-up of a piece of a detector.”

      He didn’t know it then, but a little more than a decade later, he would become the Accelerator Operations Group Leader, helping manage the teams that work with that accelerator and that very hall. His two decades in the Navy as a reactor operator molded Vasilauskis into the methodical thinker and worker he is today. During his time, he deployed five different times visiting Hawaii, the Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean, Greece, the Suez Canal, and Persian Gulf. In September 2001, Vasilauskis walked off his last Navy ship as an enlisted man and not long after walked into his first-ever, and only job interview at Jefferson Lab.

      Rising through the ranks

      He started as an operator of the accelerator, then was promoted to Crew Chief. Now, as the Accelerator Operations Group Leader, he oversees the Crew Chiefs and operators. He serves as the interface between upper management and the team on the ground working directly with the accelerator. “I rose up through that chain,” he said. “Now I get to make sure they have everything they need.”

      For Vasilauskis, this means organization. When the accelerator is turned on, the amount of time it runs is determined by the Federal budget, Physics, and maintenance schedules. During those weeks, the accelerator will run 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The operators manning shifts need proper, updated knowledge and information to constantly monitor the machine and its several hundred thousand parameters. The Crew Chiefs need a plan that ensures everything is prepared and integrated for experiments to run.

      For all of this to happen smoothly, it takes communication and planning between the physicists who need the accelerator for research and the engineers who need to perform maintenance on the accelerator for it to complete the research. To coordinate all these activities, a master plan is created between Physics and Operations, for up to a year in advance.

      Vasilauskis and his supervisors will set the schedule of operators and Crew Chiefs who will run the accelerator making sure that everything that needs to happens every hour of the day and night. “Before we start up, we have to go through and sweep it,” he explained. This includes a team physically walking the mile of tunnel to ensure all is well and clear of personnel.

      After locking it up, a redundant personal safety system monitors all points of entry to ensure no personnel can enter the tunnel. Then they begin the accelerator set up where the operators work with accelerator scientists to examine and fine-tune the optics of the beam. Once everything is ready, the accelerator can run to multiple experiments installed in up to four separate beam destinations at the same time.

      The mechanic at home

      It was during his third year in the Navy, on a trip home visiting family in Chicago, when Vasilauskis met his wife through mutual friends. Fourteen years later, they had twin girls. His wife works in data analysis for the Department of the Navy in the shipyard, and his daughters are both pursuing their education: one is a sophomore at Thomas Nelson planning to be a forensic psychologist, and the other is at Savannah College of Art and Design studying animation.

      Vasilauskis lives across the James River Bridge in Carrollton and when he isn’t at the lab, he works on his amateur radio that he built himself. With his radio he has successfully made contact with 56 localities, including another amateur radio operator in Lithuania, the origin of the Vasilauskis’ last name.

      From smashing rolls of red paper caps on the garage floor with his dad’s largest hammer to managing a team of people running the CEBAF accelerator, Vasilauskis has always been a problem-solver. A problem-solver who listens to Duran Duran, enjoys shrimp and crab legs, and completing a good day of work at Jefferson Lab. “I like to do the right thing,” he said. “Not just what we’ve always done or just what is needed.” And then he added, “I won’t pass up lobster either.”

    Youtube videos

    The Jefferson Lab campus is located in southeastern Virginia amidst a vibrant and growing technology community with deep historical roots that date back to the founding of our nation. Staff members can live on or near the waterways of the Chesapeake Bay region or find peace in the deeply wooded coastal plain. You will have easy access to nearby beaches, mountains, and all major metropolitan centers along the United States east coast.

    To learn more about the region and its museums, wineries, parks, zoos and more, visit the Virginia tourism page, Virginia is for Lovers

    To learn more about life at Jefferson Lab, click here.

     

    We support our inventors! The lab provides resources to employees for the development of patented technology -- with over 180 awarded to date! Those looking to obtain patent coverage for their newly developed technologies and inventions while working at the lab are supported and mentored by technology experts, from its discovery to its applied commercialization, including opportunities for monetary awards and royalty sharing. Learn more about our patents and technologies here.

    • Kim Edwards
      Kim Edwards
      IT Division/Information Resource

      "When I’m 95 years old, I hope I will be one of those people who worked in the background to affect other people’s lives for the better."

    • Welding Program Manager
      Jenord Alston
      Welding Program Manager

      "Everybody in the chain is working towards the same goal: to ensure that everything is built safe and to the code specifications"

    • Jian-Ping Chen
      Jian-Ping Chen
      Senior Staff Scientist

      “Every time we solve problems, we contribute. It’s exciting times for new results and discoveries.”

    • Ron Lassiter
      Ron Lassiter
      Mechanical Designer

      “Here at the lab you get to see what you’ve worked on. You can hold it in your hands. It’s rewarding to know that you’ve played a part in helping the machine to be successful.”

    • Scott Conley
      Scott Conley
      Environmental Management Team

      "There is world-class research going on here. Any given day you can be in the room with genius physicists and that’s just amazing.”

    Jefferson Science Associates, LLC manages and operates the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. Jefferson Science Associates/Jefferson Lab is an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer and does not discriminate in hiring or employment on the basis of race, color, religion, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, ancestry, age, disability, or veteran status or on any other basis prohibited by federal, state, or local law.

    If you need a reasonable accommodation for any part of the employment process, please send an e-mail to recruiting @jlab.org or call (757) 269-7100 between 8 am – 5 pm EST to provide the nature of your request.

    "Proud V3-Certified Company"

    A Proud V3-Certified Company
    JSA/Jefferson Lab values the skills, experience and expertise veterans can offer due to the myriad of experiences, skill sets and knowledge service members achieve during their years of service. The organization is committed to recruiting, hiring, training and retaining veterans, and its ongoing efforts has earned JSA/Jefferson Lab the Virginia Values Veterans (V3) certification, awarded by the Commonwealth of Virginia.

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