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The University of Gothenburg tackles society’s challenges with diverse knowledge. 56 000 students and 6 600 employees make the university a large and inspiring place to work and study. Strong research and attractive study programmes attract researchers and students from around the world. With...
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and postdoctoral researchers. Our research infrastructure is provided mainly by NAISS (National Academic Infrastructure for Supercomputing in Sweden) and C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational
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learning techniques. The postdoctoral position is a 2-year full-time employment position. We offer a competitive salary, excellent working conditions, and access to world-class facilities and infrastructure
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design nanophotonic structures and devices using machine-learning and optimization techniques. The postdoctoral position is a 2-year full-time employment position. We offer a competitive salary, excellent
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dedicated to applying cutting-edge metabolic engineering tools to address challenges in biotechnology and medicine. Main Responsibilities As a postdoctoral researcher, the majority of your working time will
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, collaborative, friendly, diverse, and inclusive team dedicated to applying cutting-edge metabolic engineering tools to address challenges in biotechnology and medicine. Main Responsibilities As a postdoctoral
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What you will do As a postdoctoral researcher, your main responsibilities are to lead and conduct research in collaboration with others, and to coach PhD students. You will be expected to develop your
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computationally hard problems are found, e.g., in optimization, quantum chemistry, materials science, machine learning, etc. Main responsibilities As a postdoctoral researcher, you will conduct high-quality
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the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description We are seeking to fill postdoctoral positions within the REionization Complementary Approach Project (RECAP
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concerns. We are seeking a postdoctoral researcher to join our team and help advance our understanding of turbulence and transport in reactor-grade plasmas—critical for designing and operating the next