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Stay up to date with new vacancies! Want to be the first to know about vacancies that match your interests? Let us know what you're looking for, and we'll send you an email as soon as a new opportunity
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education and research. The applicant is expected to have: A MSc or equivalent degree in Microelectronics, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, or a similar field; Expertise in your field of study, in
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PhD position on Closed-loop testing for faster and better EM evaluation of complex high-tech systems
read by a meter but this very, very slow and the main problem is the slow meter response time therefore the key question is how electronic products react on electromagnetic interference and we would like
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information? For more information about the position, please contact Andries Richter, Associate Professor, at +31317484738 or via email andries.richter@wur.nl . For more information about the procedure, please
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nanostructures using biophysical and biochemical techniques, as well as electron and fluorescence microscopy. Moreover, you will incorporate chemical components, peptides, PNAs, etc., into these nanostructures
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information, please contact Dr Els Weinans at e.weinans@uu.nl Do you have a question about the application procedure? Please send an email to Sophie Ketting via s.j.ketting@uu.nl Candidates for this vacancy
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skills is referred as the following: An overall score of 6.5 or higher in the International English Language Testing System (IELTS, academic version); or A score of at least 237 on the computer-based form
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The REACT MSCA DN Project: Self-awareness in humans is an innate capability, arising from the brain’s ability to process a multitude of sensory inputs. Emulating this functionality in electronic
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The REACT MSCA DN Project: Self-awareness in humans is an innate capability, arising from the brain’s ability to process a multitude of sensory inputs. Emulating this functionality in electronic
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The REACT MSCA DN Project: Self-awareness in humans is an innate capability, arising from the brain’s ability to process a multitude of sensory inputs. Emulating this functionality in electronic