63 engineering-in-image-processing Postdoctoral research jobs at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
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materials discovery, materials processing, and structural analyses. We also focus on educating engineering students at all levels, ranging from BSc, MSc, PhD to lifelong learning students. We have about 300
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Job Description A 2-year Postdoc in Internet of Underwater Things (IoUT) is available in the Embedded Systems Engineering (ESE) research section at DTU Compute , where you can help build up and
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advice of the highest quality within building design and processes, building construction and safety, building energy and installation, solid mechanics, fluid mechanics, materials technology, manufacturing
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, processing, dissemination, and applications, leading to new instruments and applications. With the specialized and refined technology available, we are getting more and more answers and further insight about
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and Resource Engineering. Responsibilities and qualifications Your main tasks will include: Evaluating the value chain of the wind industry, with a focus on material flows and circular potential
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for experimental research within molecular biology, strain engineering, high throughput screening and fermentation at different scales. Responsibilities and qualifications Focus is on genetically engineered bacteria
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opportunity to be part of large-scale experiments tackling pressing societal challenges. You'll be involved in every stage of the research process—from experimental design to data analysis and publication—while
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abroad, you may find useful information on working in Denmark and at DTU at DTU – Moving to Denmark . Application procedure Please submit your online application no later than 13 July 2025 (23:59 Danish
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Physics at https://physics.dtu.dk/ . If you are applying from abroad, you may find useful information on working in Denmark and at DTU at DTU – Moving to Denmark . Application procedure Your complete online
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] that process information in temporal rather than spatial modes to reduce their footprint. The project involves a collaboration between DTU Electro (Senior Researcher Mikkel Heuck) and Harvard University (Dr