48 parallel-and-distributed-computing Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Denmark
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qualifications: As a formal qualification, you must have a master’s degree or PhD degree (or equivalent) in engineering or equivalent within the area of bioinformatics, computational biology, or a related field
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Postdoctoral Positions in PFAS Analytics, Degradation, and Thermophysical Properties - DTU Chemistry
computational determination of thermophysical and physical–chemical PFAS properties. PFAS molecules are defined by the presence of CF₂ or CF₃ groups and exhibit a wide range of unique characteristics, including
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components for the 3D-CIRCULAR educational and certification programmes in collaboration with partner institutions. Managing and documenting progress for the second and third programme cohorts. Facilitating
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of computer-aided tools for chemical and biochemical product and process modeling, process synthesis, design, analysis and operation. The tools are applied in the chemical, petrochemical, pharmaceutical
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developed. You should be highly qualified in: Thermodynamic theories and models for electrolyte solutions Mathematical modelling and computational algorithms Scientific dissemination As a formal qualification
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, high-throughput screening, and state-of-the-art carbohydrate analysis, to validate computational designs and generate data that advances our knowledge of enzymatic carbohydrate synthesis towards
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neuroscience, objective measures of auditory function, computational models of hearing, hearing-instrument signal processing, and multi-sensory perception. Our goal is to advance the understanding of the human
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/leveraging large public databases (knowledge of working with public APIs) are advantages although not a must. Proficiency in Python and/or R in scientific computing and reproducible data analysis is a must
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system, and the research will interact closely with the quantum computing team. We expect you to be intrigued by the potential of using synthetic dimensions and quantum optics to explore the physical world
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collaborative interactions with both other experimentalists as well as computational chemists in working with catalysts and understanding the phenomena related to electrolysis. The work will take