Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Description of the offer : This PhD project supports the exploration of Vertical Compute’s vertical magnetic device concept. Thanks to the inherent high speed of magnetics and the vertical data
-
context of energy transition and industrial decarbonization, the recovery of waste heat represents a major technological and environmental challenge. This low-grade thermal energy remains largely
-
of very high energy particles (VHE) and that they are likely sources of (VHE) neutrinos. Understanding where and how particles are accelerated in these extreme environments has thus become a key question
-
synthesis and high-pressure physics, alongside leading experts such as Fabien Bénédic, Jocelyn Achard, Jean-François Roch and Marie-Pierre Adam. All the equipment needed to carry out the experiment is already
-
Nanoscale Heat Transfer" (MiNT) team of the Centre for Energy and Thermal Sciences of Lyon (CETHIL), on the La Doua-LyonTech campus in Villeurbanne. The MiNT team, made up of around fifteen people including 5
-
bench (optical, electronic and mechanical) and multiphysics analysis using high-performance on-site instruments (optical spectrum analyzer, 3D intensity profile, wavefront, RF spectrum, field polarization
-
intensive research during the last decade, high performances and recyclability are still considered as antagonist properties.2 On-demand catalysis appears as the most suitable technology to overcome
-
include well-equipped wet laboratories, with conventional labs for non-radioactive experiments, shielded labs for radiochemistry equipped with dedicated hoods for work with α-emitters or high-energy γ-rays
-
, resource allocation decisions are taken at a high frequency. Due to high complexity of the decisions as well as uncertainty of the system parameters, traditional solver based approaches are not well suited
-
to present their work. The doctoral student will benefit from privileged access to the THEMIS instrument, as well as machine time allocated to the team on national high-performance computers (e.g. Jean Zay