22 postdoc-in-nanoparticles-density-functional-theory PhD positions at University of Southern Denmark
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Molecular Biology , University of Southern Denmark , Odense. The position is available for three years from November 2025 or as soon as possible thereafter. Research Project and Role As a PhD fellow you will
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students to work on theory of polaritons and light–matter interactions, and in particular topics related to Mie-resonant photonics, electron-beam spectroscopies, chiral polaritons, nonlinear optics, quantum
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autonomous, energy-efficient, high-density BCIs. The PhD student will work on designing and testing all parts of this system, focusing on making it small, power-efficient, and suitable for medical or wearable
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for use in health science. The goal of this PhD project is to expand on these computational methods and their formal foundations and to create efficient algorithms and implementations of them. We
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) to analyse the role of individual responsibility in a theory of extreme wealth morality, and (3) to evaluate the moral obligations of the extremely wealthy in a society with existing injustices. The project is
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methodology to improve system efficiency and power density while ensuring cost effectiveness. Our goal is to create next-generation solutions that tackle key challenges in the industry. We are looking for a
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design methodology to improve system efficiency and power density while ensuring cost effectiveness. Our goal is to create next-generation solutions that tackle key challenges in the industry. We
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, ultimately for use in health science. The goal of this PhD project is to expand on these computational methods and their formal foundations and to create efficient algorithms and implementations of them. We
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through high-quality journal publications and presentations at international conferences, workshops, and symposia. Collaborate with Academic and Industrial Partners: Work closely with supervisors, postdocs
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student to work on the development of new theoretical frameworks for describing light–matter interactions in advanced nanostructures probed by polaritons generated through inelastic electron tunneling