178 computer-science-intern-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"U.S"-"UCL" positions at NIST
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attracted considerable attention for potential application in nanoscale devices, including beyond-CMOS electronics, quantum computers, chemical sensors, photodetectors, etc. Prospective advantages over
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fluxes of material (e.g., carbon) and energy through the community; and model microbial community dynamics and response to environmental perturbations. Engineering Communities: Candidates will be
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technologies to manipulate biological macromolecules such as DNA, and the controlled degradation of tissue engineering scaffold or drug delivery materials. To optimize performance and to design new applications
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the development of analytical methodologies, from both instrumentation and informatics standpoints, for the multifaceted and convoluted data that are obtained from complex biological, chemical, and forensic samples
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on the science that will underpin the development of the needed metrology to close this gap. The ideal candidates would have some understanding of high frequency electrical characterization, as well as substantial
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Division, where we develop instrumentation beyond the state of the art. Our research program offers a supportive, highly-multidisciplinary environment coupled with outstanding experimental resources
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for achieving recovery-based objectives, (3) computing the collapse risk of new and existing buildings and infrastructure systems, (3) developing improved nonlinear modeling capabilities to evaluate the response
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Research focuses on the development and application of advanced multi-detector separation science techniques. Topics include characterizing
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energetics, thermodynamics, kinetics of protein-DNA interactions, and related phenomena, and connecting these measurements to organism fitness. Computation for engineering biology, such as RNA circuits, in
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. NIST has recently launched a program to develop high accuracy 3D thermal imaging and control using thermosensitive magnetic nano-objects