Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
/Cas9 gene alteration. Your job responsibilities As Postdoc in prostate cancer biology your position is primarily research-based but may also involve teaching assignments. You will contribute
-
models of chillers, heat pumps and thermal energy storage, capturing thermodynamic behaviour, operational limits and flexibility potential. Based on these models, you will work on coordinated integration
-
oxysporum and characterize their behavior in a tomato root-soil system with a focus on the effects on the root-associated microbiome. We expect that you will be an important part of the research environment
-
has more than 600 students in its BSc and MSc programs, which are based on AAU's problem-based learning model. The department leverages its unique research infrastructure and lab facilities to conduct
-
development; therefore, some travel is to be expected. The postdoc’s research focuses on determining the changes to stratospheric aerosols, gas phase and heterogeneous chemistry, and possible ozone depletion
-
. The postdoc is expected to conduct research on an independent project and to apply for research funding in collaboration with established researchers in the department. The independent research project should
-
on on interpretative policy analysis and ethnographic methods. Empirically we conduct city case-studies in Barcelona, Brussels, Copenhagen and Sheffield as well as city networks on migrant solidarity. Job description
-
cultures in the Age of Revolutions by analysing connections and translation networks between four geographic zones that all underwent significant political and social change in the period between 1815 and
-
. Consequently, visual feedback must be used for adapting the robot behavior to the changing environment. The postdoc should contribute to the deployment of the developed solution in laboratories in both SDU and
-
oxysporum and characterize their behavior in a tomato root-soil system with a focus on the effects on the root-associated microbiome. We expect that you will be an important part of the research environment