40 quantum-computing "https:" "https:" "https:" "U.S" Fellowship positions at The University of Queensland
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
our St Lucia Campus About This Opportunity Join a world‑class research community and help shape the future of quantum computing at UQ. This is an exciting opportunity for a Postdoctoral Research Fellow
-
to decarbonisation, and the motivation to determine how quantum computing can advance this area. You will be based in an established team of experts in computational molecular and materials science within the AIBN
-
opportunity for a Postdoctoral Research Fellow to contribute to the research program of the Australian Research Council (ARC) Industrial Transformation Training Centre on Current and Emergent Quantum
-
) Based at our St Lucia Campus About This Opportunity Join a high-impact, collaborative research program at UQ as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow, working at the intersection of visualisation, visual
-
Fellow, with expertise in psychology and computer science, to join our world-leading School of Psychology to support research on an ARC Laureate Project, Transforming Understanding of Cognitive Ageing
-
in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs)-derived skin organoids (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38044307/ ), and the generation of vascularized skin organoids (https
-
analytics More information can be found at https://smi.uq.edu.au/mishc About This Opportunity This is an exciting opportunity for a Professorial Research Fellow to work within the Minerals Industry Safety and
-
computational model that explains how people regulate their resources (e.g., time, energy) across multiple life roles and identities (e.g., worker, parent, community member), how this process affects life
-
opportunity for a Research Fellow to contribute to a transformative new initiative within the Urban First Nations Research program, part of Professor James Ward’s ARC Laureate project. This transdisciplinary
-
transformative new initiative within the Urban First Nations Research program, part of Professor James Ward’s ARC Laureate project. Grounded in Indigenous methodologies and delivered through four interconnected