21 phd-communication-and-signal-processing PhD positions at University of Basel in Switzerland
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fundamental discoveries in biology and medicine, spawning several Nobel Laureates. The PhD Student Office is the central point of contact for our international PhD community, which includes around 140
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Quantum Sensing group at the Department of Physics, University of Basel, is offering a fully funded PhD position in the field of quantum sensing and scanning probe microscopy. Our research focuses on using
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invites applications of talented and ambitious candidates for a PhD student position in the field of single-molecule biophysics, with a focus on protein trapping and analysis using state-of-the-art nanopore
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understanding of protein systems. As a PhD student, you will: Design and perform fluorogenic and nano-photonic DyeCycling experiments. Write/adapt analysis code to process fluorescence trajectories and extract
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engaging in conversation. Are you highly communicative, a strong team player, and enthusiastic about welcoming young researchers from around the world? Do you bring a precise, well-structured, and forward
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100%, starting by agreement The Basel Quantum Sensing group at the Department of Physics, University of Basel, is offering a fully funded PhD position in the field of quantum sensing and scanning
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on investigating disruptions of steroidogenesis induced by endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs). EDCs are exogenous substances or mixtures interfering with hormone receptors and signalling pathways or altering
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community of PhD students here is well supported and socially welcoming. Application / Contact Interested applicants should contact the project leader, Jan Niess, by email at Janhendrik.niess@usb.ch , using
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PhD position in alpine and arctic plant ecology 100% / starting date is January/February 2026 The research group Ecology at the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Basel in
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unprecedented detail, thereby gaining access to previously overlooked effects, like dynamic disorder, with far-ranging consequences for the design and functional understanding of protein systems. As a PhD student