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Description About us Wind energy research at the Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg is internationally recognized through its integration into ForWind – Center for Wind Energy Research, a
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include in detail: Experimental work in vitro to investigate mixtures with human cell lines and organoids in microphysiological systems (MPS) Systematic testing of whole mixtures and single substances and
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to an unprecedented extent. The main topics include the description and modelling of wind turbulence, the analysis of interactions of turbulent atmospheric wind flow and wind energy systems, as well as control of wind
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of memory, senescent, and exhausted T-cells with age. The PhD candidates will work on: Identifying key metabolic pathways involved in T-cell aging using advanced genetic models that allow for parallel CRISPR
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-surface monolayers. Understanding energy and scalar fluxes across the air-sea interface is crucial for a number of environmental challenges, including weather, climate and sea state forecasting. The Air-Sea
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for the scaffold protein SANS which has been related to the microtubule-based intracellular transport in the cytoplasm of the cell and ciliogenesis in primary ciliary cell models and retinal photoreceptor cells
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principles of embryonic development. Our team employs various vertebrate models, from sharks to mice, and modern approaches (single-cell omics, multiplexed HCR, 3D and high-resolution imaging, micro-computed
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PhD projects in the life sciences. We are looking for early career scientists with a vivid interest in interdisciplinary projects to image cell dynamics from the subcellular to the patient level. PhD
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change in ultrafast optics pushed, among others, by DESY, one of our research topics focuses on the development of ultra-short pulse Ytterbium lasers employing multi-pass cell post-compression. In close
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the following PhD project: Genomic DNA is highly compacted into chromatin in order to fit into the nucleus of a cell. The packaging further provides a regulatory layer for DNA accessibility and therefore all DNA