Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
, the Community Earth System Model (CESM). Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) is a controversial, hitherto hypothetical method to cool the earth by injecting a thin reflective cloud layer into the higher
-
in the SPG. We will make use of models of different complexity up to complex Earth System models, and modelling efforts for different past periods. A personalised training programme will be set up
-
interdisciplinary environment within EMBRACER and international partners and apply advanced methods like Lagrangian tracking and reanalyses to reveal new insights into atmosphere-ice-ocean feedbacks in the Arctic
-
develop innovative methods to measure diverse isotope dimensions for methane, as well as organic precursors, in order to trace carbon flow in methane-related ecosystems; 2) You will conduct culture
-
your motivation letter. This project is part of the 10-year EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). At EMBRACER, we work at the very frontiers of knowledge on climate
-
science, mathematics, physics, or a related field. You have affinity with numerical modelling, preferably atmospheric modelling or climate modelling, and mathematical theory of dynamical systems. You have
-
between these important climate subsystems, using models of different complexity and a combination of mathematical, numerical and data analysis methods. You can find the other vacancy at PhD Position in
-
problems for quantum fields on asymptotically anti-de Sitter backgrounds with methods of microlocal analysis. A key goal of the project is to develop robust mathematical techniques for analyzing and
-
within the research programme are also warmly welcomed. The proposal should explain how the multidimensional research method is applied (as described in the research programme). In particular, we find it
-
to appropriately respond. The PhD project will take a unique, multi-method, and longitudinal approach. The basis for the PhD project will be a longitudinal cohort-study, where three groups of youth (starting ages 10