Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Country
-
Field
-
Multiple PhD positions in magnetism and spintronics are available within the Quantum Grenoble Doctoral Programme (3 different funding schemes). The call is open from 26 January till 16 March 2026
-
will join and become part of an international research environment in quantum condensed matter theory and experiments The PhD candidatewill explore quantum many-body phenomena in emerging two-dimensional
-
Home EMA The European Magnetism Association Executive Board General Council Documents Membership EMA news Communication Social Networks Mailing Event Dissemination Rules All news EMA editorials Obituaries Awards beyond EMA Materials 2023 survey Commitments Young EMA EMA Awards EMA...
-
to force the migration of ions into or out of an adjacent magnetic layer. The PhD candidate will investigate how this electrochemical technique can be used to improve spin-transfer switching of magnetic
-
Home EMA The European Magnetism Association Executive Board General Council Documents Membership EMA news Communication Social Networks Mailing Event Dissemination Rules All news EMA editorials Obituaries Awards beyond EMA Materials 2023 survey Commitments Young EMA EMA Awards EMA...
-
This project aims to establish, for the first time, a direct correlation between magnetotransport properties and the underlying magnetic microstate in 3D artificial spin-ice (ASI) lattices. Using state-of-the-art two-photon lithography followed by conformal metal deposition, we will fabricate...
-
Two PhD positions, funded by the UK Royal Society, are available at the MIND Research Group for the academic year starting in October 2026. The group is based in the Clarendon Laboratory, Department
-
: an innovative, interdisciplinary fully funded PhD programme that brings together science, engineering, and mathematics to tackle some of the most pressing challenges of our time. Awards for UK, EU, International
-
Opportunity: Applications are invited for a 4-year PhD studentship within the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Edinburgh (United Kingdom) and the Institut Laue-Langevin (France