Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
knowledge of electrochemistry and experience with fuel cell test Ability to cooperate across disciplines in an international environment Independent, structured and target oriented way of working Software
-
). The Schirmeier lab is a small multicultural research group with PhD students and postdocs of different nationalities. Thus, the group’s communication is in English. We aim to analyze the metabolic homeostasis
-
chemical diversity, biochemical interactions and biological functions of small natural product molecules in plants and fungi ( https://www.ipb-halle.de/en/ ). Research topic: Excessive phosphorus (P
-
available in the further tabs (e.g. “Application requirements”). Objective The aim of this programme is to enable former scholarship holders of the “Development-Related Postgraduate Courses (EPOS)” to carry
-
of models in existing simulation software conducting numerical studies, also on HPC systems Further specific tasks can be tailored to the attitude and interests of the PhD students/postdocs. Requirements
-
-of-the-art infrastructure to study the chemical diversity, biochemical interactions and biological functions of small natural product molecules in plants and fungi ( https://www.ipb-halle.de/en/ ). Research
-
well as research allowances) for max. 48 months. International applicants who have not been living in Germany for more than 15 months can apply. At the time of the application, the last final exam (Master's Degree
-
-class graduates with expertise in the CRC-addressed PhD subjects, high interdisciplinary desire to learn and willingness to cooperate, openness for internationalization and diversity, very good verbal and
-
glycosylation, the most complex cellular enzymatic process chemical or chemoenzymatic synthesis of glycan-based reporter molecules and small molecule inhibitors contribution to scientific primary publications
-
are a small international team based at the Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences in Göttingen, Germany. We aim to understand how molecular machines select transmembrane cargo proteins and