77 computer-science-quantum "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "University of Waterloo" scholarships at Technical University of Munich
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/11250664 https://www.jmlr.org/papers/v26/25-1161.html Job Specifications For PhD applicants: Excellent Master’s degree (or equivalent) in engineering, computer science, or related disciplines (typically
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embedded into the quantum technology network formed by WMI, the Excellence Cluster MCQST (www.mcqst.de), the TU München (www.tum.de), Munich Quantum Valley (https://www.munich-quantum-valley.de/), and many
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. Classical cryptographic techniques face inherent limitations, especially regarding future threats from quantum computers or AI-driven adversarial strategies. Physical layer security offers a promising
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knowledge of the German language besides English. If interested, please send your full application to the email adress provided below. At the Mechanics & High Performance Computing Group, there is an open
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. The project aims to significantly accelerate the adoption of quantum approaches within life sciences and demonstrate their transformative potential for biomedical imaging. Your Profile: The successful applicant
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technologies Qualifications: - Master’s degree in a relevant subject, e.g., electrical or mechanical engineering, mechatronics, that meets the requirements for enrolment for the PhD degree at Technical
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that multi-billion parameter models run on hardware hospitals can actually afford Your Profile - Completed university degree (Master or equivalent) in computer science, mathematics, physics, medical
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24.03.2026, Academic staff The Chair of Physical Chemistry at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) investigates chemical and structural surface dynamics of supported atoms and size-selected
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System Modelling group at TUM (https://www.asg.ed.tum.de/esm/home/) and will be closely involved in the Schmidt Sciences project MountAInWater, coordinated by the Institute for Science and Technology
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questions. The advertised positions will be part of the project “QS-Gauge: quantum simulation of lattice gauge theories”, funded by the Emmy Noether programme of the DFG. The project’s overarching goal is the