19 computational-physics-simulation-"Prof"-"Prof" Postdoctoral research jobs at Chalmers University of Technology
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project The successful candidate carry out will research in the field of theoretical continuous-variable quantum computation. In particular, the focus will be on bosonic codes, classical simulation
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This multidisciplinary position is part of a WASP NEST (Novelty, Excellence, Synergy, Teams) project focused on advancing generative models and perceptual understanding in computer vision. The
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simulations. Theoretical X-ray spectroscopy is, moreover, used to aid the interpretation of physical characterization of catalysts. The Competence Centre for Catalysis (KCK) is an interdisciplinary research
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(Physics, Applied Physics, Nanotechnology, Computer Science, Engineering, or equivalent), obtained no more than three years prior to the application deadline (according to the current agreement with
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overview You will be actively involved in several ongoing maritime risk-related projects and contribute to the development of Chalmers’ ship bridge simulators. The project aims to deliver a risk-aware
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involve established software tools, such as: CHEMKIN-PRO for steady one-dimensional simulations of laminar flames with detailed chemistry. CONVERGE for unsteady three-dimensional simulations of turbulent
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energy use and minimizing environmental impact. This collaborative effort brings together expertise in materials science, physics, polymer chemistry, and composite mechanics, with a particular emphasis on
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thermal conductivity b) Development of hBN thermal interface material that combines a high degree of compressibility and recovery c) Modeling, simulation and characterization of phonon transfer across
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in computer science, mathematics, statistics, bioinformatics, or equivalent. The candidate should have previous experience in bacterial genomics, machine learning/artificial intelligence, preferably
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This postdoc project aims to address a critical challenge in quantum computing: errors in superconducting qubits caused by cosmic radiation, which cannot be corrected using existing methods