220 computational-physics "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Chalmers" positions at Technical University of Munich
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/11250664 https://www.jmlr.org/papers/v26/25-1161.html Job Specifications For PhD applicants: Excellent Master’s degree (or equivalent) in engineering, computer science, or related disciplines (typically
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knowledge of the German language besides English. If interested, please send your full application to the email adress provided below. At the Mechanics & High Performance Computing Group, there is an open
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26.03.2026, Academic staff Doctoral Candidate f/m/d in computational proteomics/bioinformatics with a focus on plant proteomics Candidates must hold a master´s degree in Data Engineering, Data
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Europe • Membership in the International Graduate School of Science and Engineering (IGSSE) and participation in the course program (https://www.igsse.gs.tum.de/en/igsse/about/) • IGSSE-funded doctoral
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process includes the evaluation of existing systems, extensive simulation-based analyses, as well as the implementation and validation of algorithm and system designs in real world settings. Your tasks
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plasma physics (XGC, IPPL). Expected qualifications: A Master's degree in Computer Science or Applied Mathematics. Necessary knowledge: Modern C++, GPU computing with CUDA/SYCL, MPI, Krylov solvers
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Optimization (DPO) and reinforcement learning from human feedback, building preference datasets together with clinicians - Build and run a Red Team process with physicians, computer scientists, and patient
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in Toulouse, led by Professor Mar Perez-Sanagustin. Your Profile • Completed Master’s degree (or equivalent) in a STEM discipline (e.g., mathematics, physics, biology, computer science), data
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9 Feb 2026 Job Information Organisation/Company Technical University of Munich Department Computer Engineering Research Field Technology » Communication technology Researcher Profile First Stage
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24.03.2026, Academic staff The Chair of Physical Chemistry at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) investigates chemical and structural surface dynamics of supported atoms and size-selected