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physical sciences, engineering, advanced microscopy techniques, and DNA nanotechnology. Biochemists, synthetic biologists, bioengineers, chemical biologists, chemists, or candidates with a computational
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The TUM School of Computation, Information and Technology at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) welcomes applications for a PhD or Postdoc Position (m/f/d, 100%, 2 years+) in Numerical Mathematics
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Position in Numerical Mathematics m/f/d, 100%, 2 years+ As part of the second phase of the DFG funded Priority Programme SPP2311, the Chair for Numerical Mathematics under the leadership of Barbara Wohlmuth
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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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computer science with very good results - Interest on topics around the area of distributed systems and data management - Basic knowledge in distributed systems and graph algorithms is desired - Hand-on experience
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from over 50 nations, it is the largest institute of the Max Planck Society. The Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics (Prof. Dr. Helmut Grubmüller) is inviting applications for a PhD
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from over 50 nations, it is the largest institute of the Max Planck Society. The Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics headed by Helmut Grubmüller is inviting applications for a PhD
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Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Göttingen | Gottingen, Niedersachsen | Germany | 2 months ago
40 research groups and some 1,000 employees from over 50 nations, it is the largest institute of the Max Planck Society . The Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics headed by (Prof. Dr
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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
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, 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://www.math.cit.tum.de/math