61 distributed-computing-"Multiple" PhD scholarships at Technical University of Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
of diverse teams with multiple technical and theoretical expertise. Applicable responsibilities for both positions: You are expected to be able to organize and perform your own experiments, and critically
-
process. An integral part of the project will be the development of enhanced data-driven physics methods to achieve reliable prediction of material removal rate and material removal distribution
-
driving rapid growth in distributed energy resources (DERs), the electrification of transport, heating, and water systems — and the rise of hyperscale data centers. Coordinating these heterogeneous active
-
programme, please see DTU's rules for the PhD education . Assessment The assessment of the applicants will be made by prof. Patrizio Mariani, Dr. Jon Christian Svendsen and Dr. Fletcher Thompson We offer DTU
-
programme, please see DTU's rules for the PhD education . We offer DTU is a leading technical university globally recognized for excellent research, education, innovation and scientific advice. We offer a
-
Job Description The Quantum and Nanophotonics section at DTU Electro is seeking an excellent and highly motivated PhD student to be a part of a program on ‘Symmetry-guided discovery of topological
-
for the efficient formation of high-value compounds. Advanced NMR methods and computational data analysis will be compounded to devise novel reactions towards pharmaceutical precursors, polymer building blocks and
-
degrees in either the natural sciences (chemistry, physics, mathematical/computational biology) or in the formal sciences (statistics, computer science, mathematics), but must have a serious interest in
-
, including electrical engineering, control theory, industrial engineering, electronics engineering, energy policy, data science, and applied mathematics. As part of the Alliance program, your project will be
-
nanoparticles and reactions at the atomic-level by combining path-breaking advances in electron microscopy, microfabricated nanoreactors, nanoparticle synthesis and computational modelling. The radical new