Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- Nature Careers
- Technical University of Denmark
- Aarhus University
- University of Southern Denmark
- Aalborg University
- University of Copenhagen
- Copenhagen Business School
- Copenhagen Business School , CBS
- Danmarks Tekniske Universitet
- Roskilde University
- ;
- ; Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS)
- ; Technical University of Denmark
- ; University of Copenhagen
- ; Xi'an Jiaotong - Liverpool University
- COPENHAGEN BUSINESS SCHOOL
- Section for Computational and RNA Biology, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen
- The University of Copenhagen
- University of Copenhagen, Section of Microbiology
- 9 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
deformation and fracture in solid materials. Expected start date and duration of employment This is a 1-year position starting on 15 August 2025 or as soon possible thereafter. Job description Physics-informed
-
The section for Luminescence Physics and Technologies (LUMPHYS) at the Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), invites applications for a 2-year postdoctoral position
-
affiliated with the Center for Visualizing Catalytic Processes (VISION) at DTU Physics www.vision.dtu.dk and work closely with VISION’s faculty members, PhD students, postdocs and international leading
-
of the capacity of this large program, you will work in close collaboration with two PhD students on that particular project as well as the rest of the research group at DTU Physics that counts a total of 56 people
-
about large challenges and enjoy solving them, have an extraordinary drive towards achieving groundbreaking results, love physics discussions and participating in thoughtful conversations, make things
-
affiliated with the Center for Visualizing Catalytic Processes (VISION) at DTU Physics www.vision.dtu.dk and work closely with VISION’s faculty members, PhD students, postdocs and international leading
-
of the capacity of this large program, you will work in close collaboration with two PhD students on that particular project as well as the rest of the research group at DTU Physics that counts a total of 56 people
-
about large challenges and enjoy solving them, have an extraordinary drive towards achieving groundbreaking results, love physics discussions and participating in thoughtful conversations, make things