Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
intensesCountryFranceCityTOULOUSEGeofield Contact City TOULOUSE Website http://www.lncmi.cnrs.fr/ STATUS: EXPIRED X (formerly Twitter) Facebook LinkedIn Whatsapp More share options E-mail Pocket Viadeo Gmail Weibo Blogger Qzone YahooMail
-
the evaluation, the intensification and the optimization of carbonation (biotic and abiotic) processes involving different feedstocks, to address three different applications of industry decarbonation, in straight
-
the evolution of the electrolytes during the charging process, including stability, pH, ion nature, and ion concentration. This project is part of an ANR program that will begin at the end of 2025 and involves
-
://ecoanthropologie.fr/fr/anthropologie-genetique-agene-6043 ), whose research focuses on three areas: (i) settlement history and inference of demographic processes, (ii) adaptation of human populations
-
Description A 2-year post-doctoral position (with possibility of extension) is available in the Plant Reproduction and Development (RDP) laboratory, located on the campus of ENS Lyon, France. The successful
-
, the process of host infection remains poorly understood at the molecular level. The fd phage, which specifically infects Escherichia coli, has been used as a model for studying these viruses. This phage
-
environment, with access to state-of-the art brain imaging facilities (two research-dedicated MRI scanners / 1.5 and 3T, hybrid PET-3T MRI, MEG-EEG). The vibrant research community at CRNL and other nearby
-
using the KM3NeT detectors • Data analysis from SVOM instruments as well as images from the COLIBRI telescope • Participation in KM3NeT shifts and service tasks (calibration, construction, processing), as
-
CARNOT project, GALOPER. Galoper is a joint project between GPM Rouen and LCS Caen aiming at building up a complete picture of the mechanisms controlling the Gallium oxide behavior within the porous MFI
-
des Platinoïdes dans l'Aval du Cycle) project, which aims to develop processes for recovering platinum elements (ruthenium, rhodium, palladium), molybdenum and technetium from spent nuclear fuel