Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
the Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering of the ETH Zurich and by the Roche Pharma Research and Early Development (pRED). The programme focuses on development of new tools and methods to resolve
-
on the development and application of advanced electronic structure calculations to explore the phase diagram and relevant properties of layered Ruddlesden-Popper-type nickelates. Project background Layered nickelates
-
experience includes primary cell culturing, work with advanced in vitro models, epithelial/endothelial barrier characterization, and iPSC differentiation; skills in optical microscopy, sensor development and
-
year, with a prospect of becoming indefinite) on the development of the data-analysis suite and pipeline infrastructure for the upcoming gravitational-wave space observatory LISA. In 2015, the LIGO–Virgo
-
) energy system modelling. The role also includes tasks such as website design (including the development of dashboards) and management, designing and contributing to wikis, and supporting ongoing teaching
-
. We are working closely together with ETH researchers to provide support in the wide area of scientific computing from data management and analysis, development of scientific software, to porting and
-
), sorbent properties (e.g., surface charge, specific area), and solution chemistry. Through this work, we aim to support model development and inform regulatory frameworks, in close collaboration with
-
development of innovative acquisition and processing techniques to study the Earth’s shallow subsurface. Project background Switzerland has committed to achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. CCS
-
development of algorithms and large-scale numerical simulations. Your expertise will extend to various areas, including quantum Monte Carlo, machine learning, quantum computing, quantum machine learning, and
-
. 10007007; project start 01.10.2025: collaboration partners: J. Löffler, ETH Zürich; K. Klein, Universität Zürich; R. Müller, ETH Zürich, B. Schaller, Universitätsspital Bern) focusing on the development