243 web-programmer-developer-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"PhD-Jobs" positions at NIST
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301.975.6662 Description An experimental and modeling program is underway to further the understanding of dynamic processes that occur in fires and to reduce the impact of fire on people, property, and the
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to consider multidimensional landscapes. The goal of this research project is to develop models that can be used to evaluate the stability and predict transitions as cell populations progress from pluripotent
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single gold atomic bond. A high resolution force sensor is being developed that can mount as a sample in the UHV environment to serve as a calibration reference for the experiment. Along with atomic bond
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instruments with sensitivities and stabilities orders of magnitude lower than can be achieved in other devices of comparable size. We are developing a broad class of instruments that realize fundamental and
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synthesis and the development of complex fluids is important to a number of industrial applications. Many diagnostic assays use the temperature dependence of different analytes as a diagnostic tool. For
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of the AFM probe-sample interaction. This research opportunity will focus on developing state of the art AFM instrumentation and computation modeling for 3D nanoscale property characterizations. In either
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describe and improve instrument behavior in physically relevant limits. Abundant examples are found in physics, chemistry, and biology. We are interested developing new mathematical models to simulate
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device based upon the use of nanodiamonds. It is, therefore, of paramount importance to develop modeling and measurement techniques of the lattice distortion/strain field due to a color center in
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, such as blood vessels and bone, we also need to develop a platform for in situ mechanical measurements, which may be achieved by measuring deformation under controlled stress and flow. 3D printing is
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viability in scaffolds as a quality attribute of a tissue engineered medical product. We will develop new methods for assessing cell viability in scaffolds that have advantages such as being label-free, non