18 computational-scientist PhD positions at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
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/multiqubit . The project is supported by an ERC Consolidator grant (€ 2.6 million) from the European Research Council (EU). Our research aims at exploring quantum information science at the nanoscale and
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the benefits of semantic integration, e.g. in scheduling, resource sharing, or formulation optimization Collaborating with chemical engineers, software developers, and data scientists to ensure practical
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charges Thermochronometry and rock surface dating You will be part of the dynamic and interdisciplinary LUMIN team, which includes engineers, scientists, postdocs, and PhD students working collaboratively
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Job Description Do you have a background in bioinformatics or AI/ML? Do you wish to do a PhD whereby you use your computational skills to discover new insights in industrially important bacteria
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defects and trapped charges Thermochronometry and rock surface dating You will be part of the dynamic and interdisciplinary LUMIN team, which includes engineers, scientists, postdocs, and PhD students
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Job Description If you are establishing your career as a scientist and you are looking for the best possible foundation for fulfilling your dreams and ambitions, it is right here in front of you. At
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Job Description Do you want to grow as a scientist and become a microbiome researcher at the best technical university in Europe? Do you want to hone your scientific skills and use programming
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. The project will be supervised by Associate Professor Martin Hansen (DTU Sustain), and co-supervised by Professor Hans Peter Arp (NTNU Chemistry), Senior Scientist Anna Rosenmai (DTU Food), Veerle Jaspers (NTNU
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team, you will work alongside 50 talented scientists, engineers, and students. Our research center is supported by major foundations and agencies including the Danish National Research Foundation, Novo
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nanoparticles and reactions at the atomic-level by combining path-breaking advances in electron microscopy, microfabricated nanoreactors, nanoparticle synthesis and computational modelling. The radical new