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single electron spins in diamond as sensors to explore magnetic phenomena at the nanoscale. This doctoral project will center around the development and application of scanning magnetometry at ultra-low
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active sites), in vitro and in vivo enzyme screenings, electrochemistry, and machine learning-assisted directed evolution. As part of this project, you will collaborate closely with PhD students and
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of the University of Basel calls for applications for two one-year start-up grants of CHF 32,000 (beginning April 1, 2026). The grant is designed to support promising junior researchers in developing a PhD project to
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developments in the field of chironomid palaeoecology include the development of high-resolution analyses to reconstruct decadal-scale ecosystem dynamics of lake ecosystems, the interpretation of influx data
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-thinking approach to your work, while enjoying the challenge of learning and mastering new tasks? Are you creative, curious, and motivated to optimize, develop, and implement new ideas? If so, you are
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of Basel invites applications for a PhD position to develop and apply a “Quantum optical twist and scan microscope" – an entirely novel scanning probe instrument for nanoscale studies of emergent properties
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trapping and analysis using state-of-the-art nanopore experiments. About the Project Our group has pioneered the development of the Nanopore Electro-Osmotic Trap (NEOtrap), a groundbreaking technique that
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recruitments (summer and winter) and work closely with the Biozentrum group leaders to maintain and further develop the high-quality standards of our PhD program. You will independently organize and oversee
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-bleaching of the fluorescent dyes involved, which ends the experiment prematurely, rendering many biological questions inaccessible. To bypass this limitation, our group has developed DyeCycling/FRET, where
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experiments. About the Project Our group has pioneered the development of the Nanopore Electro-Osmotic Trap (NEOtrap), a groundbreaking technique that enables label-free trapping and sensing of single proteins