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– marine ecology and biodiversity) and the IATE unit (UMR 1208 – agropolymers and process engineering). The postdoctoral researcher will work closely with researchers and engineers from the three units
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Postdoctoral Researcher in Synthetic Organic Chemistry and Photochemistry, IBMM, Montpellier, France
and photocontrolled polymerisation for bioprinting Project acronym: SELPHY Total duration of the project: 30 mois Brief description of the project: Tissue engineering aims to produce artificial living
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Additional Information Work Location(s) Number of offers available1Company/InstituteGestion de l’Eau (G-EAU)CountryFranceGeofield Contact City Montpellier Website https://www.g-eau.fr/ Street 163 rue Auguste
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" (ISEM) gathers 270 personals working on evolutionary biology, palaeontology and ecology. The person to be hired will be assigned to team "Evolution Expérimentale des Communautés". He/she will interact
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electronic spins, indirect excitons, and polaritons, using two dedicated experimental setups: one for visible-range magneto-optics and another one for UV micro-photoluminescence. Our fundamental research aims
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researcher will carry out research tasks in IMAG, within the ERC NEMESIS project team, led in IMAG by two principal investigators, Jérôme Droniou (CNRS) and Daniele Di Pietro (University of Montpellier
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collaboration with LIRMM, IRMB/CARTIGEN, and the industrial partner Symétrie. The project lies at the interface of biomechanics, robotics, imaging, and biology, within a stimulating interdisciplinary ecosystem
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internationally recognized for its work in the different classes of essential biomolecules: lipids, sugars, nucleosides and oligonucleotides, peptides and proteins, prebiotic molecules and biopolymers. The grouping
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the hydrogeology of volcanic and basement aquifers. - main mission: The recruited researcher will contribute to the development and implementation of numerical flow and transport models to improve the understanding
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(EMF) plays a key role in understanding the evolution of the planet, its climate, and its habitability over the past 4.5 billion years (Shahar et al. 2019). Paleomagnetism, which allows us to study past