125 web-programmer-developer-"https:"-"UCL"-"CEA-Saclay"-"https:" Postdoctoral positions in Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
great setting for pursuing novel research ideas and developing your independent career. Your Profile We are looking for a highly motivated, determined, innovative, and collaborative postdoc to lead the
-
, software engineering, and artificial intelligence, starting November 1, 2025 or as soon as possible thereafter. The position is part of the REINS project, which develops innovative methods and tools
-
items (less than 10 kg). The position emphasizes system design and development for a variety of robotic applications, particularly those aligned with the section’s core focus on high-voltage line
-
characterization in complex in-situ environments. The key responsibility of the position is to develop post-processing methods to extra essential features from the collected measurement data despite drone positional
-
side, you will investigate and develop data-driven methods for optimal and nonlinear control with a particular focus on dual control and on approaches to measurement scheduling and active sensing
-
phoneme-level representations to improve intelligibility and robustness in challenging acoustic environments. Your work tasks In this role, you will be responsible for developing and implementing advanced
-
teaching assistant. The Department of Mathematical Sciences has strong research groups in many areas of mathematics, and has an active postdoc and visitors' programme; we refer to our homepage for more
-
” (Improving green innovation for the blue revolution – Homepage - IGNITION ). The project seeks to revolutionize salt tolerant (halophyte) biomass use by developing a universal biorefinery model for processing
-
MOFs and their hybrid materials. The primary objective is to explore the fundamental structure–property relationships that govern MOF vitrification and liquid-phase behavior, and to develop new MOF-based
-
the differentiated cells, we explore how pathogenic calmodulin mutations impact cellular differentiation, development, and signaling. The project is a collaboration between prof. Michael Toft Overgaard and assist