29 cyber-physical-system-data-mining PhD positions at Utrecht University in Netherlands
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PhD Position on Sea Ice in the Arctic Climate System Faculty: Faculty of Science Department: Department of Physics Hours per week: 36 to 40 Application deadline: 28 August 2025 Apply now Join
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attendance to two Dutch Research Schooles in Theoretical Physics over the course of the PhD. The position is embedded in a vibrant community of theoretical cosmology, gravitational-wave, and string theory
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accessible AI and XR technologies for people with disabilities through inclusive Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and participatory design methods. Your job Around 25% of the Dutch population lives with long
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Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research is looking for a motivated PhD candidate with a background in physics, applied mathematics, meteorology, geosciences or a related field. You will work within the
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, the faculty is a strong and challenging organisation. The Faculty of Geosciences is organised in four Departments: Earth Sciences, Human Geography & Spatial Planning, Physical Geography, and Sustainable
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with researchers from climate physics, hydrology, sustainability science and complex systems dynamics and apply a range of different models. Starting from the recent AMOC tipping simulations performed
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, the faculty is a strong and challenging organisation. The Faculty of Geosciences is organised in four Departments: Earth Sciences, Human Geography & Spatial Planning, Physical Geography, and Sustainable
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. The Faculty has six departments: Biology, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Information & Computing Sciences, Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. Together, we work on excellent research and inspiring education. We do
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, and are motivated to understand and re-engineer complex biological systems. Additionally, you bring: a MSc degree in (bio)physics, (bio)chemistry, or a related field; experience working in a wet lab and
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the physical and biological pumps during rapid climate transitions (e.g., the last glacial period and Holocene) using sediment records. Our data will be used in marine carbon cycle models to predict