35 postdoc-in-thermal-network-of-the-physical-building PhD positions at University of Basel
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
employer committed to excellence through diversity and encourages all qualified applications irrespective of gender or physical disabilities. For more information about the position, salary and conditions
-
, or physical disabilities. For more information about the position, salary and conditions please do not hesitate to contact Denise Traber (denise.traber@unibas.ch ). The application deadline is January 23, 2026
-
with a strong interest in understanding the drivers of cancer spread. We focus on characterising the dynamic behaviour of tumour cells within distinct metastatic niches. Building on our experience in
-
. Building on our experience in cell-fate tracking tracking and studying various stages of the metastatic cascade, we set out to follow tumour cell-niche interactions to reveal how distant sites shape cancer
-
cells within distinct metastatic niches. Building on our experience in cell-fate tracking tracking and studying various stages of the metastatic cascade, we set out to follow tumour cell-niche
-
100%, starting by agreement The Basel Quantum Sensing group at the Department of Physics, University of Basel, is offering a fully funded PhD position in the field of quantum sensing and scanning
-
, investigating how moral foundations drive entrenched positions; how social media content creators frame their arguments; and which moral framings make constructive dialogue more likely within the context of new
-
2 Oct 2025 Job Information Organisation/Company University of Basel Research Field Mathematics » Applied mathematics Mathematics » Mathematical analysis Mathematics » Probability theory Physics
-
, aligning AI systems with complex human values, and building self-improving agents capable of autonomous learning. Our work combines cutting-edge experimentation – spanning RL, meta-learning, and robust
-
niches. Building on our experience in cell-fate tracking tracking and studying various stages of the metastatic cascade, we set out to follow tumour cell-niche interactions to reveal how distant sites