15 computational-physics-simulation Postdoctoral positions at Chalmers University of Technology
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3 Apr 2026 Job Information Organisation/Company Chalmers University of Technology Research Field Computer science » Computer architecture Computer science » Other Researcher Profile Recognised
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17 Apr 2026 Job Information Organisation/Company Chalmers University of Technology Research Field Computer science » Other Engineering » Electrical engineering Engineering » Other Physics » Applied
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We are looking for a postdoc to join our team at the Division of Computer and Network Systems. Become part of our innovative group and contribute to exciting research in Computer Architecture within
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retrieval-augmented generation open fundamentally new possibilities for automating and scaling this process. In this project, you will develop intelligent computational systems that combine constraint-based
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medicines, we encourage you to apply. Qualifications Doctoral degree in a relevant field (e.g., Applied Physics, Biophysics, Nanotechnology, Optics, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, or related
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to achieve scalability in terms of the simulator systems. The work will be done in close collaboration with the physics team to be able to develop optimizations also at the algorithmic level in a co-design way
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, creep etc.), other AM technologies (PBF-EB, DED), in-situ process monitoring during PBF-LB (optical tomography, melt pool monitoring, etc.), thermodynamic simulations, advanced materials characterisation
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. A copy of your PhD thesis Use the button at the foot of the page to reach the application form. A background check may be conducted as part of the application process. Please note: The applicant is
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Environmental science » Earth science Mathematics » Applied mathematics Physics » Acoustics Physics » Chemical physics Physics » Computational physics Physics » Other Researcher Profile Recognised Researcher (R2
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Technology Laboratory (QTL) , we explore how quantum physics can unlock radically new ways of processing information - far beyond the limits of classical systems. Our research spans quantum computing, sensing