Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
sensors (IEMN, Y. COFFINIER). This thesis project concerns the development of instrumentation to detect and monitor the progression of a nuclear accident, in order to implement the most appropriate accident
-
. The student will join the DEEM team - Diversity, Ecology and Evolution of Microbes (http://www.deemteam.fr/en/ ). Our lab is situated in the new campus of the University Paris-Saclay, ca. 30 km south of Paris
-
conduction properties of materials at the nanoscale. The ANTICHI project aims to develop and demonstrate a unique vacuum Scanning Thermal Microscopy (SThM) instrument capable of making contact thermal
-
the development of tools for the continuous simulation of powder flows, similar to what we know how to do in fluid mechanics. Recent progress in the description of the behavioural laws of granular media suggests
-
of the University of Padua (Italy), implying that the PhD candidate will ultimately move to Padua as well. Ten PhD projects are funded by the European MCSA program, and the network spans over Italy, France, Germany
-
) is a UMR under the supervision of the CNRS (IN2P3), the University of Paris-Saclay and the University of Paris is located on the campus of the University of Paris -Saclay in Orsay. The laboratory is
-
to train students in Terahertz Biosensing. The driving force for TeraIBs - is to develop a radically new technology based on Terahertz (THz) radiation for biomedical detection and diagnosis, based on a team
-
algorithms, development of the readout electronics for the photo-detection system, and development of the analysis framework for an analysis of oscillations in DUNE using atmospheric neutrinos. Over the next
-
) Sun-Earth relations and space plasma physics; (3) astrophysics. It is supervised by the CNRS, the University of Orléans and the CNES. The laboratory employs around 80 people. The successful candidate
-
(Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Telecommunications) at Paul Sabatier University. The PhD candidate will be supervised by Alain Estève and David Pech at LAAS-CNRS (Toulouse), within the MRS team (Reactive