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of a new understanding of capillary flow, drop impact, and wetting in these fibrous networks. The PhD research fellow will design experiments on droplet flow on fibers and focus on droplet accumulation
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description The PhD project aims to explore how multiple layers of gene expression regulation—including DNA packaging, transcription initiation, and translation—interact to control gene activity. Using
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design to pursue this question. Include a tentative progress plan for the PhD including coursework you would benefit from. A curriculum vitae (summarizing education, positions, academic work, etc.) Copies
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, Faculty of Educational Sciences, University of Oslo (UiO). The PhD position is connected to the development of the ongoing research project «Democracy, children and representation» (Demorep). A short
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of Oslo as part of the Organising Impact (ORGIMP) project. The project is funded by the Research Council of Norway and the PhD position is a central part of ORGIMP. The ideal candidate is situated in
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regulation, the Sanctions regulation, and the national security regulation. No one can be appointed for more than one PhD Research Fellowship period at the University of Oslo. More about the project and PhD
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PhD Research Fellow in Experimental Fluid Mechanics: Tunable hairy surfaces for droplet flow control
properly. Please turn on JavaScript in your browser and try again. UiO/Anders Lien 9th June 2025 Languages English English English PhD Research Fellow in Experimental Fluid Mechanics: Tunable hairy surfaces
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appropriate conditions, it provides a confidence set (credibility set if prediction is Bayesian) for a multivariate estimate with statistical coverage guarantees. This PhD project aims to develop new CP methods
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of their fellowship period within the duty component of 25 %. Place of work is Department of Informatics at Blindern, Oslo.. Project description The postdoctoral position is funded by the Department
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in supervising students at both master's and PhD levels. This project is funded by a prestigious FRIPRO Grant for Early Career Scientists and is built on our ongoing Integreat project “Embedded