Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Applications are invited for a 2-year position in the field of CFD and modeling of heat pumps at the Department of Mechanical and Production Engineering, Aarhus University, Denmark. Expected start
-
is part of an interdisciplinary project funded by the Human Frontiers Science Program (www.hfsp.org) and involves collaboration with researchers from biology and mechanical engineering from the UK
-
topological phases and hysteresis-driven memory mechanisms. You will work closely with experimental and theoretical physicists and material scientists at DTU Physics, DTU Energy as well as our collaborators
-
for fundamental optomechanics and practical gas sensing applications. The postdoctoral fellow is expected to contribute to the design, fabrication and optical/structural/mechanical characterization of “string
-
, neuroscience and personalised medicine. The Department of Biomedicine provides research-based teaching of the highest quality and is responsible for a large part of the medical degree programme. Academic staff
-
The Department of Mechanical and Production Engineering, Aarhus University, invites applications for a 2-year postdoc positions offering applicants an exciting opportunity to join the ERC-funded
-
Source (ESS), Sweden, the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL), France, the International Institute of Molecular Mechanisms and Machines, (IMOL), Poland, and the
-
computational models with microbiome-driven mechanisms and lay the groundwork for studies on microbiome modulation as a therapeutic strategy. Integrating clinical expertise and advanced molecular analyses ensures
-
. You will join the Junior Innovator program at Aarhus University, comprising young researchers from across all faculties. You will be encouraged to and supported in applying for external funding e.g
-
laboratories, core and animal facilities. You will work in the brand new ‘Skou Building’ located at the Aarhus University Campus. About the research group The Laboratory for Gene-Regulatory Mechanisms in Cancer