30 computational-physics "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "U.S" Postdoctoral positions at University of Sydney in Australia
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. Research Environment You will be part of the Sydney Centre in Geomechanics and Mining Materials (SciGEM), a world-leading research group in applied granular physics. SciGEM offers a vibrant, collaborative
-
Full time or part time, 12 months fixed term position, located on the Camperdown Campus at the School of Physics Opportunity to join the Quantum Science group, a community of world-class scientists
-
, sensing, and computing within a single unified network. These positions will involve advancing fundamental theories and the enabling technologies needed for simultaneous communication, sensing, computing
-
underpinning a new national screening program for type 1 diabetes in children Academic Level A from Base from $89,831p. a (Pro Rata) and Level B Base Salary from $127,436 p.a. (pro‑rata) + 17% superannuation
-
developing network of academic, industry and professional partners, supported by strong computer literacy and a commitment to responsive, professional service. Sponsorship / work rights for Australia You must
-
Medical Research Council, our 4-year research program meets this need. A collaborative initiative of aged care providers and consumers (Southern Cross Care, Hardi Aged Care, United Protestant Association
-
ambitious research program advancing AI-enabled decision-making dynamics in future megaprojects. The successful candidate will work with Dr. Wanchun Liu , Senior Lecturer and Australian Research Council
-
Neurochemistry research team is seeking a postdoctoral researcher to contribute to a research program investigating why humans lose myelin with ageing and how this sensitizes us to neurodegenerative diseases
-
Australian Prostate Cancer Foundation (ACRF) Single Cell Proteomic Laboratory. The successful candidate should have a PhD in bioinformatics, computational biology, cancer genomics or a related field with
-
- Psychology role sits within the School of Psychology and will contribute to a major global research program examining the discreteness bias - the belief that social categories are rigid, discrete and immutable