Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
on quantum light, either usiing "discrete variables" (photon number superpositions) or "continuous variables" (field quadratures) Where to apply Website https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Offres/CDD/UMR9001-LOILAN-007
-
of the CNRS and the University of Limoges. He (She) will join the “Phot-fibre” team in the “Fiber photonics and coherent photonic sources” axis. He (She) will collaborate with colleagues from A*STAR Singapore
-
photonic imaging and patch-clamp electrophysiology. The postdoctoral fellow will contribute in particular to different aspects: - in vivo calcium imaging (ex vivo imaging approaches and patch-clamp
-
experimentally shown to modify phenomena like the quantum Hall effect. On the theoretical front, the interaction between topological matter and cavity photons was also considered. Topological materials are a class
-
LHCb data of charmless B decays containing 0 or photons in the final state. She/he will be member of the LHCb team at IJCLab and work with the members of the team for the studies mentioned above. The
-
at reaching a realistic evaluation of the time resolution of the neutrino detector. More specifically, the focus is on exploiting the scintillation light signal in the LAr-TPC, characterizing the photon
-
the laboratory involved in the project: 2 from the ECM team and 2 from EPS (Electrons-Photons-Surfaces) experimental physics team. The position is located in Palaiseau (Essonne) at the École Polytechnique research
-
(Physics of Lasers, Atoms and Molecules, CNRS – University of Lille) brings together around 180 members and conducts research on light–matter interactions, structured around five main themes: Photonics
-
), combining state-of-the-art in vivo approaches with quantitative data analysis. About the lab and environment The Rebola Lab (https://therebolalab.org ) studies how variability in synaptic function across
-
? No Offer Description - work environment: The Institut d’Electronique et des Systèmes (IES) is a joint research unit from U. Montpellier and CNRS. The nanoMIR research group (https