Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
Successful candidate will join the Integrative Cell Signalling Group (https://www.uni.lu/lcsb-en/research-groups/integrative-cell-signalling/ ), led by Prof. Alexander Skupin, which focuses
-
dedicated researcher with proven interest in action research and stakeholder engagement; familiar with topics related to sustainability transitions, systems thinking, social construction of science and
-
available from October 2025 under the supervision of Prof. Helfrid Hochegger and Dr. Tony Oliver, at the Genome Damage and Stability Centre, School of Life Sciences. Deadline: 06th of June 2025 PROJECT TITLE
-
Your Job: You will be part of the top-class scientific department "Chemical Hydrogen Storage" at the renowned HI ERN. Under the direction of Prof. Dr. Peter Wasserscheid, our department researches
-
additive manufacturing of lightweight structures to enable novel development of materials and process design. The PhD position will be supervised by Prof. Noomane Ben Khalifa (Hereon/Leuphana University
-
Structures group (Prof. Wim Van Paepegem) from the same department.Only candidates with a Master degree should apply. The candidate should have a strong interest in experimental and computational mechanics
-
), EMBL Heidelberg and the Hopp-Children’s Cancer Center (KiTZ). These include Prof. Andreas Kulozik and Prof. Matthias Hentze as part of the Molecular Medicine Partnership Unit (MMPU) research group
-
of Chemistry (Inorganic Chemistry). Our group investigates fundamental questions in bioinorganic chemistry using advanced spectroscopic techniques to understand the structure and reactivity of complex metal
-
international network structure in order to integrate existing competences and knowledge, and to link various actors within the complex area of climate change. The PhD position is also supervised by Prof. Dr
-
project offers a unique opportunity to develop autonomous microswimmers, which are bioinspired structures at the micrometre scale that can propel themselves through fluids, mimicking natural swimming