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- Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
- Delft University of Technology (TU Delft); Delft
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- Delft University of Technology (TU Delft); today published
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., term rewriting) to algorithmic optimizations (e.g., group level algorithms), and to hardware optimizations (e.g., automated pipelining). The PhD student will be supervised by Nusa Zidaric. Key
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., term rewriting) to algorithmic optimizations (e.g., group level algorithms), and to hardware optimizations (e.g., automated pipelining). The PhD student will be supervised by Nusa Zidaric. Key
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such as the electricity grid, which our faculty is helping to make completely sustainable and future-proof. At the same time, we are developing the chips and sensors of the future, whilst also setting
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grid, which our faculty is helping to make completely sustainable and future-proof. At the same time, we are developing the chips and sensors of the future, whilst also setting the foundations
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manufacturing technologies, including light-based (DLP) and extrusion-based (3D fiber deposition) approaches. You will take the lead on applied physics, mechanics, manufacturing processes, and algorithm/coding
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networks could change the way we communicate, run apps in the cloud, and help scientific tools and sensors. To build such quantum networks, nodes based on solid-state emitters are promising contenders. One
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completely sustainable and future-proof. At the same time, we are developing the chips and sensors of the future, whilst also setting the foundations for the software technologies to run on this new generation
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diverse data, information, and knowledge—collected from survey data, narrative accounts, and participatory insights to sensor measurements and high-resolution geospatial data—is an essential prerequisite
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grid, which our faculty is helping to make completely sustainable and future-proof. At the same time, we are developing the chips and sensors of the future, whilst also setting the foundations
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sensors. To build such quantum networks, nodes based on solid-state emitters are promising contenders. One specific type of solid-state emitters, rare-earth ions (REIs) in host crystals, are particularly