60 engineering-computation "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "CNRS " Postdoctoral research jobs at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
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, gender, disability, race, religion, or ethnic background, are encouraged to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject to special rules for security and export control, open
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and interpretation of proteolysis signatures). Apply molecular biology and microbial engineering to investigate functionality of microbial systems, particularly involving large membrane-bound enzymes
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Job Description Center for Nano-Immune Cell-Engineering (NICE) at the Department of Health Technology (DTU Health Tech) invites a highly motivated Postdoctoral Researcher to join our group in
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. You will be affiliated with the Intelligent Transport Systems section at the Department of Technology, Management and Economics (DTU Management) of the Technical University of Denmark. The position is
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considered. All interested candidates irrespective of age, gender, disability, race, religion or ethnic background are encouraged to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject
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our vision of shaping the future of power electronics. Join us in this exciting venture to lead scientific advancements and educate the next generation of engineers. As a formal qualification, you must
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to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject to special rules for security and export control, open-source background checks may be conducted on qualified candidates
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working in an entrepreneurial environment, helping mature a technology in the initial phase of a potential startup? If yes, this postdoctoral position is exactly for you. At the Technical University
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considered. All interested candidates irrespective of age, gender, disability, race, religion or ethnic background are encouraged to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject
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is poorly understood. This project will discover and engineer single-domain antibodies (sdAbs) that specifically recognise K6-linked ubiquitin. Using these new molecular tools, we will establish state