Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
of classical computers will require thousands, or even millions, of qubits. This creates a major engineering hurdle: interconnect complexity. Each qubit needs dedicated control and readout lines, which
-
three-year PhD programme at CBS gives you the opportunity to conduct research under the supervision of CBS’s associate professors and professors, supported by research related PhD courses. The programme
-
, and policy-makers, and help accelerate the transition from breakthrough science to real-world solutions. The precise objectives of the PhD position are to be determined in dialogue between the candidate
-
biopsies and advanced, preclinical models. A combination of wet-lab and computational biology, close ties to the clinic, and a wonderful team of early career scientists give us the agility and expertise
-
influence its development directly. We are currently evolving our mechanical engineering degree program and constructing labs to support both educational activities and research. Workplace description
-
. The overarching goal of this newly funded project is to realize quantum light sources coupled to quantum memories. Quantum memories are key components of optical quantum computers and scalable quantum networks
-
of two Associate Professors, two Assistant Professors, a Lab Manager, a Center Administrator, and app 10-15 PhD students, postdocs and visiting scientists. Several POLIMA researchers have attracted
-
Job Description A 3-year fully funded PhD stipend for studying the gene-regulatory mechanisms that control cancer biology at single-cell resolution is available in the group of Associate Professor
-
. The position is funded by a Villum Young Investigator grant awarded to Assistant Professor P. André D. Gonçalves, who will supervise the PhD research. The position is available starting October 1, 2025
-
it has on the audience. Thus, the project contributes to the still underdeveloped, but growing research agenda on constructive journalism. The project is led by Professor MSO Morten Skovsgaard