71 phd-student-fpga Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
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funding applications related to your field of research. You will work in close collaboration with academic and industry partners. Contributing to ongoing activities within the group. Contribute to students
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collaboration with audiologists and clinicians. Co-supervising PhD & MSc students, particularly those working in electrophysiology and computational modelling. Developing a computational model of cochlear signal
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international conferences is integral to the job. Furthermore, participation in supervising B.Eng., B.Sc., and M.Sc. students is expected. As a formal qualification, you must hold a PhD degree (or equivalent
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participation in international conferences. Teach and supervise BSc and MSc student projects, and be co-supervisor for a PhD student As a formal qualification, you must hold a PhD degree (or equivalent). We offer
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, 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 270 dedicated employees. Read more about
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. Develop GUI tools for the developed methods. Publish high-quality journal papers. Supervise MSc student projects and be co-supervisor for PhD students. The successful candidate is expected to have: A keen
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headed the authoring of published scientific papers. As a formal qualification, you must hold a master’s degree (Research Assistant) or a PhD degree (Postdoc) We offer DTU is a leading technical university
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supervise a PhD-student hired on a similar topic. Your techniques will be published in the open source MagTense framework, and will be used in powering future beyond-state-of-the-art simulations within
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selected flagellates Do formal fluid mechanical analyses, including cfd, of propulsion and foraging mechanisms in selected flagellates, based on observations. Supervise Bsc and Msc student projects. As a
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model that treats each charge carrier and its various transport transitions stochastically. The PhD student will join the LUMIN team that is pushing the boundaries of luminescence physics. The researcher