Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- University of Oslo
- University of Bergen
- UiT The Arctic University of Norway
- University of South-Eastern Norway
- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- Simula Research Laboratory
- Western Norway University of Applied Sciences
- Nord University
- The Norwegian Polar Institute
- University of Agder
- University of Stavanger
- 2 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
the mission of SecurEL. The PhD candidates funded by the Centre will contribute with cutting-edge knowledge and research. Overall, the Centre will directly finance 17 PhD and postdoc positions, at NTNU
-
, PBAT, PBSAT, PBSA, Bio-PES) which are used for biodegradable fibres, twines, nets and ropes. The research work of the candidate shall contribute to develop new models and knowledge on degradation
-
snow in local and regional climate models is poorly constrained, leading to uncertainties in estimating mass loss through sublimation and snow redistribution. The PhD candidate will develop and execute
-
Professor, 4 Assistant/Associate Professors and 8 PhD/Postdoc research fellows, HVL Robotics offers a close collaboration within variety of robotics disciplines. The robotics laboratory is equipped with
-
of blowing snow in driving accumulation and sublimation in mountainous conditions. The simulation of blowing snow in local and regional climate models is poorly constrained, leading to uncertainties in
-
Chemistry » Molecular chemistry Chemistry Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Country Norway Application Deadline 25 Sep 2025 - 23:59 (Europe/Oslo) Type of Contract
-
green transition. About the project/work tasks: The overall goal of this PhD project is to develop methodologies for real-time modeling and inversion of geophysical well logs, with a particular focus on
-
networks”, meeting and exchanging biomolecules in a cellular society. The reasons for this behaviour remain poorly understood, and outside of some model species, this behaviour itself is poorly characterised
-
sematic technologies. Both groups have a dynamic and interactive working environment with good gender balance, consisting of full-time professors, researchers, and many postdocs and PhD candidates
-
“greenhouse” (warmer than present) conditions. In i2B we will retrieve new, key Arctic geological archives of past warmth and employ climate models to bring our current knowledge about a warm Arctic beyond the