45 cloud-computing Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Munich in Germany
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://mediatum.ub.tum.de/doc/1687691/ltbbjgwihiht96fqfeblxdyj7.ITSC22_CommonOcean.pdf Job Specifications For PhD applicants: Excellent Master’s degree (or equivalent) in computer science, engineering, or related disciplines
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writing. Drive the publication of research results in top-tier robotics conferences and journals. Requirements Ph.D. in Robotics, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, or a
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of Orthopaedics and Sports Orthopaedics and the Institute for AI and Informatics in Medicine. We work at the intersection of artificial intelligence, medical imaging, and clinical practice, developing methods
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finite elements) as well as alternative discretization methods (e.g., Lattice Boltzmann Methods), and high-performance computing. A selection of possible research areas can be found on our website: https
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following areas: Mathematical Analysis/ Numerical Analysis/ Theoretical Machine Learning Please note: Applications from candidates with degrees in other disciplines (e.g., Computer Science, Engineering) will
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: Excellent Master’s degree (or equivalent) in computer science, engineering, or related disciplines (typically mathematics, physics). For Postdoc applicants: Excellent track record in computer
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06.10.2025, Wissenschaftliches Personal We are seeking outstanding candidate for a Postdoctoral position in the field of robot motion and control algorithms for soft material handling, starting immediately. We are seeking a highly qualified and motivated individual with a strong academic...
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We are seeking outstanding candidate for a Postdoctoral position in the field of robot motion and control algorithms for soft material handling, starting immediately. We are seeking a highly qualified and motivated individual with a strong academic background in robotics and a keen interest in...
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technologies to fundamental physics questions. The advertised positions will be part of the project “QS-Gauge: quantum simulation of lattice gauge theories”, funded by the Emmy Noether programme of the DFG
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that algorithmic parameters are tuned so that the over-approximation of the computed reachable set is small enough to verify a given specification. We will demonstrate our approach not only on ARCH benchmarks, but