349 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Washington-University-in-St"-"Prof" positions at NIST
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are developing high order integral equation methods and numerical tools for computational electromagnetics. This research focuses on the frequency domain electromagnetic field solvers that involve automatic
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further enriches the available data from which material behavior can be extracted. Separate work is being done to develop robust algorithms to quantitatively compare the physical and simulated experimental
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water sensor at the molecular level. Our measurement techniques and numerical models based on constrained regularization algorithms allow us to link these measurements with other techniques including
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Sonmez Turan meltem.turan@nist.gov 301.975.4391 Description NIST standardized cryptographic algorithms are intended to be "bulletproof". That is, the computational complexity needed to break them is
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., database composition, algorithm biases). Proposals should address these challenges with strategies to evaluate the metagenomic identification process and enable end users to select the appropriate tools
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group is working to develop the measurement science and technology to make multiplexed biomolecular measurements practical, while also working to develop the standards and measurement assurance approaches
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tunable materials such as ferroelectrics and multiferroics for adaptable electronics. New materials are continually being developed for electronic applications, and accurate measurements
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Tytus Dehinn Mui Mak tytus.mak@nist.gov 202.360.6799 Description In the past decade, the rapid pace of development in mass spectrometry technologies has accelerated the rise of metabolomics and resulted
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. Advisers name email phone Yamil Simon ysimon@nist.gov 301.975.8638 Description NIST has long developed and provided reference materials to assist others in making reliable measurements. The NIST Standard
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extensive measurement capabilities, CMOS circuit design work for foundry tape-out, and theoretical work developing new algorithms and architectures that leverage the low-energy, high-speed properties