53 algorithm-development-"St" Postdoctoral research jobs at Nature Careers in Denmark
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of cutting-edge technologies. You will be part of the Power-to-X project E-CH4 Booster, which targets the development and upscaling of bioreactors for conversion of CO2 into green methane. The project is an
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description You will be contributing to developing and implementing novel algorithms at the intersection of computational physics and machine learning for the data-driven discovery of physical models. You will
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The Computational Protein Engineering (CPE) group at The Novo Nordisk Foundation Centre for Biosustainability (DTU Biosustain) is developing novel methods to engineer proteins more effectively using
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environment focusing on integrating multi-source satellite remote sensing data and developing novel algorithms to quantify agroecosystem variables for environmental sustainability. You will focus on processing
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and embedded cryptography, and quantum programming languages. The section is part of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, and other research sections at the department are Algorithms
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opportunity to join an ERC-funded research project (BioRIcON) focused on developing nucleic acid-based artificial motors and devices for precise regulation of key cellular processes. Expected start date and
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-year extension. The project is fully funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark (DFF). The main objective of this project is to develop physics-constrained, data-driven turbulence models
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developed in relation to crop nitrogen uptake, soil storage and losses to the environment via hydrological and gaseous pathways. The ideal candidate will have experience of using biogeochemical models
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for catalysis and electrocatalysis. You will develop a research activity within experimental characterization of electrocatalyst model catalysts using electrocatalysis workstations, scanning probe microscopy and
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diseases. In this project, the candidate will develop new computational strategies to identify human genetic variation linked to cell fate changes in neurodevelopmental disorders and cancer. The candidate