141 information-security-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"U.S" positions at NIST in United States
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Demand for mobile data, the implementation of new wireless devices, and an explosion of mobile users has stressed our telecommunications
-
are particularly interested in developing and characterizing hybrid quantum systems (interfaces between dissimilar physical media), suitable for quantum information purposes, and exotic sources of faint light
-
to understand dynamic changes within microbiomes or to design interventions (e.g., modeling algal blooms, improving human health or crop yields, bioremediation). This project seeks is to develop measurement
-
to effectively convert interactions occurring at gas-solid or liquid-solid interfaces, or between molecules, into measurable signals that provide information on the nature and concentration of chemical and
-
within the Quantum Measurement Division is investigating graphene metrology towards two goals: (1) to develop near-room-temperature graphene quantum Hall devices and other possible quantum electrical
-
Information Technology Laboratory, Applied and Computational Mathematics Division NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Machine Learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI
-
. The mechanisms by which cells transition from pluripotent to differentiated states is incompletely understood, and correlating measurable parameters to identify efficient culture conditions and release criteria
-
. The capabilities of single-photon detectors have a major impact on what is and is not feasible in developing new quantum technologies. We are interested in expanding the capabilities of single-photon detectors, and
-
scattering is routinely used to study solutions and surface adsorption of biomacromolecules. Neutrons are particularly well suited to study biological materials because of their sensitivity to light
-
material properties and evolves as a function of deformation. Accurate measurement of the crystallographic texture is the key to understanding how the material will respond during forming of parts