18 postdoc-in-postdoc-in-automation-and-control-"Multiple" PhD positions at Utrecht University in Netherlands
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measurements of key organics, plus culture experiments, to uncover the biochemical pathways and environmental controls on methane formation and oxidation. Your job This work will enhance our understanding
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is an important control on hydrology. The latter will determine water supply, food security and sanitation to human communities. The paradigm is that wet regions become wetter and dry regions become
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are encouraged to submit a research proposal that aligns with UCALL's research programme and encompasses multiple areas of law. Your job Over a period of four years, you will conduct a PhD research under the
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and 11 support staff and about 21 Postdocs and 24 PhD candidates. This project is part of the 10-year EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). At EMBRACER, we work at the
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'world leading' by an international visitation committee. Currently, IMAU employs 15 faculty members and 10 support staff and some 20 Postdocs and 30 PhD students, and offers a friendly, open and
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a good command of English (reading, writing, speaking). Our offer A position for 18 months, with an extension to a total of four years upon successful assessment in the first 18 months; a working week
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, you will focus on that. Your job In this PhD project, you will be part of a large consortium of six PhD candidates and three postdocs. Together, we aim to understand the working of storm surge barriers
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support staff and about 20 Postdocs and 30 PhD candidates. The Ice and Climate group at IMAU is an inspiring, high-quality and versatile research group focusing on ice sheets, sea level, and climate
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and is affected by various biogeochemical processes. The processes governing ocean alkalinity act over multiple timescales (from instantaneous chemical equilibration to hundred thousand of years) and
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-Jan Reichart Dr Martin Ziegler , and Dr Lennart de Nooijer . Multiple others will be involved for specific aspects of the project. Foreseeable international collaborators include Profs. Stijn de