Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
safety-critical products. FAST adopts a through-scale and through-process research methodology, integrating materials science, manufacturing processes, product and structural design, and lifecycle
-
. Required selection criteria You must have a relevant Master's degree in Engineering or Computer Science or equivalent. Your course of study must correspond to a five-year Norwegian course, where 120 credits
-
1 Mar 2026 Job Information Organisation/Company NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology Department Department of Electronic Systems Research Field Computer science Researcher Profile
-
you gain admission to the PhD programme in Biology within three months of your employment contract start date, and that you participate in an organized doctoral programme through out the period of
-
) aluminium in high-value, structural, and safety-critical products. FAST adopts a through-scale and through-process research methodology, integrating materials science, manufacturing processes, product and
-
landscape changes Apply for this job See advertisement About the position The School of Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Landscape and Society at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU) has a
-
for a PhD education. You must meet the requirements for admission to the Faculty of Natural Sciences Doctoral Program . You must demonstrate excellent oral and written presentation skills in English
-
this field, and contribute with our expertise in areas ranging from nanoelectronics, phototonics, signal processing, radio technology and acoustics to satellite technology and autonomous systems. Knowledge
-
offers programmes in automation engineering, computer engineering, electric power systems, simulation and visualization. Our research areas include autonomous vessels, robotics, cybernetics, medical
-
, while they are firmly anchored in modern theory. The Department offers programmes in automation engineering, computer engineering, electric power systems, simulation and visualization. Our research areas