20 phd-in-pure-mathematics Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Southern Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
21 Aug 2025 Job Information Organisation/Company University of Southern Denmark Department The research group in Algorithmic Cheminformatics at the Department of Mathematics and Computer
-
have obtained a PhD degree in a relevant field and have a PhD-age of max 4 years per October 1st , 2024 (parental leave deducted). The postdoc candidate will be affiliated with the Philosophy Section
-
project supported by the Challenge Programme of the Novo Nordisk Foundation: “Mathematical Modelling for Microbial Community Induced Metabolic Diseases”, led by Prof. Daniel Merkle. The expected starting
-
/requirements We are looking for highly motivated, dedicated, and ambitious candidates with: A PhD in Molecular Biology, Biomedicine, Computational Systems Biology or similar. If you have not yet completed your
-
of PhD diploma, if Phd diploma has not yet been received, please include statement from your supervisor Shortlisting may be used in the assessment process. Incomplete applications and applications received
-
, pharmacy, mathematics, computer science and biology. The Department’s research thus contributes to new knowledge and solutions with applications in the areas of climate, environment, energy and health
-
degree (PhD) in electronics, robotics, mechatronics, electrical engineering, embedded electronics, or a related subject area. The applicant is expected to have relevant research and teaching experiences
-
research experience at PhD level in a relevant area such as robotics and control preferably applied to robots with flexible links. The candidate is hence expected to have most of the following qualifications
-
Engage in teaching as required Required Qualifications PhD in Bioinformatics, Computer Science, Physics, Engineering, Bio-engineering, or equivalent Excellent track record in Bioinformatics with at least
-
for applicants who have obtained their PhD within the past 4 years, have a good publication record, and have proven their expertise on computational electrodynamics and the theory of light–matter interactions