321 web-programmer-developer-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" positions at NIST in United States
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, providing a direct measurement of an organism’s phenotype. At the Hollings Marine Laboratory (HML) in Charleston, SC, we employ metabolomics (and plan to incorporate lipidomics) as a useful technique to
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activated defect evolution, material damping, and temperature dependence of physical properties of piezoelectric materials. During the past two decades, innovative single-crystalline piezoelectric materials
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@nist.gov 301.975.6740 Description With the development of nanoparticle and colloidal technologies that include processing in the dispersed phase (or are fundamentally liquid phase processes), there is a need
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303.492.5291 Description Single molecule studies are revolutionizing biophysics. The Perkins group focuses on developing and applying high-precision single-molecule studies based on optical traps and atomic
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, commercial qNMR standards have only appeared in the last few years. We seek proposals related to the development of high-accuracy methods or standard reference materials for the analysis of gas-phase mixtures
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position focuses on developing measurement methodologies to characterize mechanical properties and deformation behavior in advanced packaging applications. It involves: Design, application, and evaluation
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quantities for meaningful comparison. We lead the development of innovative standards and novel calibrations to achieve accuracy in localization microscopy [1, 2], with applications ranging from nanoplastic
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seeks to develop the analytical capabilities and standards to support the measurement needs of the water measurement community and other governmental agencies that monitor and regulate water
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301 975 4364 Kathryn L. Beers kathryn.beers@nist.gov 202 578 8353 Aaron A Burkey aaron.burkey@nist.gov 301.975.4769 Sara Orski sara.orski@nist.gov 301 975 4671 Description Development of quantitative
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, health care, and nuclear security applications. No instrument today directly measures all decays in a sample with sufficient energy resolution to uniquely identify each radionuclide. NIST is developing a 4