349 web-programmer-developer-"St"-"Washington-University-in-St"-"St" positions at NIST
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are developing the next-generation deployable, calibration-free Doppler thermometers. The Doppler broadening of spectral lines relates gas temperature to SI-defining physical constants and immutable gas
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thomas.forbes@nist.gov 301.975.2111 Edward Ryan Sisco edward.sisco@nist.gov 301 975 2093 Description This opportunity focuses on developing and measuring the capabilities of ambient ionization mass spectrometry
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property data primarily intended for model development that investigate how the molecular size, molecular structure, and polarity of fuel constituents impacts their thermophysical properties. Measurements
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of the inflaton potential. Such experiments require even more precise measurement of the polarization of the microwave background with exquisite control of systematic errors. NIST is developing polarization
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Description We are currently developing microsystems for multiplexed biomolecular analysis (e.g., gene expression, microRNAs, proteins, cytokines) at the single cell level. Research goals include developing
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303.497.4740 Description Our project has been developing single photon detectors and sources for use in a variety of applications requiring light at the faintest levels. We are currently involved in
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. The development of specific genome editing technologies leads to the emerging of epigenetic editing, which now allows the epigenetic editing at specific loci and enables direct study of functional relevance
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Description We are seeking a NIST postdoctoral Fellow within the Materials Measurement Science Division . This postdoc will be a key member of a new project to develop an autonomous platform for developing and
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for postdoctoral applicants to develop SEM reference samples in NIST’s NanoFab and to develop models to simulate electron scattering, secondary electron generation, electron transport, scattering in gases
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, health care, and nuclear security applications. No instrument today directly measures all decays in a sample with sufficient energy resolution to uniquely identify each radionuclide. NIST is developing a 4