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Remote Research Computing Jobs in Utah (NOW HIRING)

Senior Machine Learning Scientist

Salt Lake City, UT · On-site +1

$88.50K - $121K/yr

... 2 days can be remote) Benefits Eligible: Yes Manager: Head of Reservoir R&D Why we exist ... computing, and uncertainty-aware modeling--to dramatically improve geothermal discovery and ...

Senior Machine Learning Scientist

Salt Lake City, UT · On-site +1

$88.50K - $121K/yr

... 2 days can be remote) Benefits Eligible: Yes Manager: Head of Reservoir R&D Why we exist ... computing, and uncertainty-aware modeling-to dramatically improve geothermal discovery and ...

Remote Research Computing information

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in Remote Research Computing, and why are they important?

To excel in Remote Research Computing, you need a strong background in computer science, data analysis, and scientific research methods, often supported by an advanced degree in a relevant field. Familiarity with high-performance computing (HPC) systems, cloud platforms, programming languages (such as Python or R), and experience with collaborative tools are typically required. Excellent problem-solving, communication, and self-management skills help professionals work effectively across virtual teams and complex projects. These skills and qualities are vital to ensure efficient research workflows, accurate data handling, and successful collaboration in a remote, technology-driven environment.

What are some common challenges faced by professionals working in Remote Research Computing, and how can they be addressed?

Professionals in Remote Research Computing often encounter challenges such as ensuring secure and efficient data transfer, collaborating with geographically dispersed teams, and troubleshooting computational issues without in-person support. To address these challenges, it's important to become proficient with remote collaboration tools, maintain clear communication with team members, and stay updated on best practices for data security and cloud resource management. Many organizations also provide virtual onboarding and regular training sessions to help remote research computing staff adapt to evolving technologies and workflows.

What is remote research computing?

Remote research computing refers to the use of computing resources, such as high-performance computers or cloud-based systems, that can be accessed from anywhere via the internet. This enables researchers to perform complex data analysis, simulations, or computational experiments without being physically present at the location of the hardware. It is especially useful for collaborative projects, large datasets, and situations where local computing power is insufficient. Researchers use secure connections and specialized software to interact with these remote resources efficiently.
What are the most commonly searched types of Research Computing jobs in Utah? The most popular types of Research Computing jobs in Utah are:
What are popular job titles related to Remote Research Computing jobs in Utah? For Remote Research Computing jobs in Utah, the most frequently searched job titles are:
What cities in Utah are hiring for Remote Research Computing jobs? Cities in Utah with the most Remote Research Computing job openings:

Senior Machine Learning Scientist

Zanskar

Salt Lake City, UT • On-site, Remote

$88.50K - $121K/yr

Full-time

Posted 9 days ago


Job description

Role Overview 
Title: Senior Machine Learning Scientist (Surrogate modeling & decision science in the earth sciences)
Hours: Full-Time, Salaried
Location: Salt Lake City, UT, Hybrid (3 days in office, 2 days can be remote)
Benefits Eligible: Yes
Manager: Head of Reservoir R&D
 
Why we exist
Geothermal energy is the most abundant renewable energy source in the world. There is 2,300 times more energy in geothermal heat in the ground than in oil, gas, coal, and methane combined. However, historically it’s been hard to find and expensive to develop. At Zanskar, we’re building technology to find and develop new geothermal resources in order to make geothermal a cheap and vital contributor to a carbon-free electrical grid.
 
To do that, we combine deep subsurface expertise with advanced AI technologies—including modern machine learning, scalable scientific computing, and uncertainty-aware modeling—to dramatically improve geothermal discovery and development outcomes. We build systems that can learn from sparse and noisy data, emulate expensive physics simulations, and help teams make faster, higher-confidence decisions about where to drill and how to develop fields.
 
Who you are
You will help build the modeling and decision-making core of Zanskar’s geothermal exploration software. This role blends scientific machine learning (surrogate modeling) with sequential decision-making under uncertainty. A successful candidate will:
Explore: you’re open-minded about methods and will prototype, benchmark, and iterate across approaches.
Reproduce & adapt: you can implement ideas from papers and new frameworks quickly, then harden the best ones into reliable workflows.
Decision-minded: you care about end-to-end outcomes (value, risk, time-to-decision), not just model accuracy.
Uncertainty-first: you build models that are accurate, well-calibrated, and dependable under distribution shift and sparse data regimes.
Collaborative: you work well with domain experts and can translate between geology/engineering intuition and ML systems.
 
What you’ll do
Build fast, reliable models that emulate or augment computationally expensive physics-based simulations (e.g., reservoir, wellbore, and coupled multi-physics workflows).
Evaluate and compare multiple modeling approaches (physics-informed, operator learning, transformers, diffusion models, etc.), establishing strong baselines and selecting methods based on evidence.
Build multi-step decision systems for exploration and appraisal: POMDP-style planning and belief-space decision making to recommend exploration steps.
Translate scientific and engineering questions into well-defined learning and decision problems: inputs/outputs, constraints, boundary/initial conditions, reward/cost structure, and success metrics (e.g., expected NPV, probability of success, downside risk).
Prototype, benchmark, and iterate across approaches (POMDP solvers, RL methods, VOI-style baselines, MPC-style replanning), then harden the best ones into reliable workflows and APIs.
Collaborate deeply with geoscientists, reservoir engineers, and software engineers to integrate these models and policies into production software.
 
What we’re looking for
3+ years of applied ML experience, ideally in scientific ML, decision-making under uncertainty, surrogate modeling, robotics/control, or related engineering/science domains.
Expertise in python and modern ML tooling (PyTorch preferred).
Track record of taking models from prototype → rigorous evaluation → adoption by technical stakeholders.
Strong fundamentals in probability/statistics and comfort with messy, real-world scientific datasets.
Experience building or using surrogate models for expensive simulators (PDE-driven systems, multi-physics, or similar).
Relevant technical strengths
Surrogate modeling. 
Sequential decision-making under uncertainty and reinforcement learning. 
Software engineering: Git, code review, reproducibility, CI basics, Docker/container workflows.
Experience with diffusion models.
Exposure to subsurface modeling domains: geothermal, oil & gas, CCS, hydrogeology, geoscience, or related.
Familiarity with cloud infrastructure and data systems (SQL, object storage, orchestration).
 
Location and Benefits
This position is based out of our headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah, and is hybrid.
Benefits include:
Paid holidays
15 days PTO + PTO accrual increase based on tenure
Medical, dental and vision coverage
401k 
Stock options
Growth opportunities at a company with a direct impact in displacing carbon emissions
Equal Opportunity Employer 
 
Zanskar is an equal-opportunity employer and complies with all applicable federal, state, and local fair employment practice laws.