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development and regeneration (1.0 FTE) Description of the project The opening is for a research position within the field of mathematical or theoretical biology, computational physics, applied mathematics
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and competitions. The University of Bristol seeks an aspiring researcher with an engineering, physical sciences or mathematical background and an aptitude for practical implementation of cutting edge
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, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS). We work on next-generation power electronics, energy systems for smart grids, advanced battery electronics and management, power devices, power and energy measurements
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Mathematics, Technomathematics, Computer Science, Engineering Informatics, Theoretical Computer Science, Physics Description Description The research group Cyber-Physical Systems of Prof. Matthias Althoff
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competences in: communication theory, networking, information theory, physics, mathematics, computer science, and statistics. This PhD project falls under Research Thrust RT4 on Reliability and Trustworthiness
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consortium comes in. PRELIFE unites experts across a wide range of disciplines from astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science, earth and planetary sciences, education, mathematics, to physics. Together
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, environmental, energy, and material sciences. In this environment, we are a strongly mathematically oriented research group with a focus on the analysis of various problems in geophysics (in particular
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The candidate will be embedded in the Theory cluster at the Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science, supervised by Dr. Tobias Kappè and Prof. Dr. Marcello Bonsangue from the System Modelling and Analysis
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PhD position - Modelling the emergence of information transfer in prebiotic self-replicating systems
consortium comes in. PRELIFE unites experts across a wide range of disciplines from astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science, earth and planetary sciences, education, mathematics, to physics. Together
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Applications are invited for a fully-funded 42-month PhD studentship with Dr Rachel Nicks and Prof Stephen Coombes on the Leverhulme Trust-funded project White Matter Computation: Utilising Axonal