Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
15th June 2025 Languages English English English The Department of Physics has a vacancy for a PhD Candidate in computational material research at the Materials Theory Group Apply for this job See
-
document that you are particularly suitable for a PhD education You must meet the requirements for admission to the PhD programme in Medicine and Health Sciences Good oral and written presentation skills in
-
background, you may be considered if you can document that you are particularly suitable for a PhD education You must meet the requirements for admission to the faculty's Doctoral Programme Excellent
-
considered if you can document that you are particularly suitable for a PhD education You must meet the requirements for admission to the faculty's Doctoral Programme Excellent communication skills in English
-
be considered if you can document that you are particularly suitable for a PhD education. You must meet the requirements for admission to the doctoral program of the Faculty of Engineering . Excellent
-
Engineering, or Mechatronics Your education must correspond to a five-year Norwegian degree program, where 120 credits are obtained at master's level You must have a strong academic background from your
-
for the PhD candidate to successfully complete a the doctoral education programme and be awarded a doctoral degree. The PhD position focal point will be addressing the structure and functional aspects
-
Finite Element Analysis. The candidate will work with a team of experienced researchers within the fields of concrete technology, structural design and computational mechanics. You will report to
-
established research project CIRCULess, https://circuless-project.eu/ . The duration of the PhD project position is three years. The project is funded by the Horizon Europe program and coordinated by NTNU
-
technology, structural design and computational mechanics. You will report to the supervising Professors Stefan Jacobsen, Jan Arve Øverli and Tore Børvik, NTNU, and Dr. Sumita Dey, Forsvarsbygg (Norwegian