59 parallel-processing-"International-PhD-Programme-(IPP)-Mainz" Fellowship positions at University of Oslo
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bridge traditionally separate areas of study to provide new insights into fundamental biological processes relevant to health and disease. Your main tasks will be The candidate will analyze and integrate
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the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Oslo. We focus on the fundamental physics of geological processes related to: transport and reactions in deformable porous media, fracturing
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processing should be guaranteed to happen according to some established policy or contract, and it should prevent any other unauthorised access or usage since sensitive data that is disclosure, or misuse could
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an integrated computational biology approach, the project will bridge traditionally separate areas of study to provide new insights into fundamental biological processes relevant to health and disease. Your main
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PhD Research Fellow in Experimental Fluid Mechanics: Tunable hairy surfaces for droplet flow control
. The fellowship period is 3 years. The position is part of the HAIRY project funded by the Research Council of Norway. The project aims to provide a fundamental understanding of the physical processes involved as
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. The project explores how entangled social, political and environmental processes shape change. We are especially interested in the non-linear processes of change which are not factored into existing models
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is a cross-disciplinary Geology-Physics center hosted by the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Oslo. We focus on the fundamental physics of geological processes related
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the biophysical processes as droplets wet membrane compartments in cells. Numerical simulations and theoretical models will be developed of the viscous interfacial fluid flow at cellular membranes alongside
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on the understanding of how the biophysical processes as droplets wet membrane compartments in cells. Numerical simulations and theoretical models will be developed of the viscous interfacial fluid flow at cellular
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way. At our research environment, we seek to understanding the origins and processes governing stability and discontinuity of biological and geological systems at different levels of organization from