11 Electrical-Engineering positions at Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Sweden
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The Department of Forest Biomaterials and Technology (SBT) is part of the Faculty of Forest Science, has about 50 employees and is based in both Umeå and Uppsala. The department conducts high
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Relationships. The research focuses on identifying levers to raise people's awareness of environmental issues and to adopt more environment/biodiversity friendly behaviours through 1) digital technology, and
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degree or similar in a technical field, e.g., Engineering Physics, Electrical Engineering, Computer science. Fluent in English. Meriting: Experience in remote sensing data processing and analysis Knowledge
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tolerance and pathogen resistance. Our discoveries have in particular contributed to the current view that autophagy plays multifaceted roles during plant-virus interactions (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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governance as well as legal, economic and technical aspects, including digital technology. Landscape management addresses many of the contemporary societal challenges, such as climate change, biodiversity loss
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. The PostDoc will review and select improved methods for the incorporation of environmental and animal welfare criteria within LCA models of current and future livestock systems. The work includes (1
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about the composition and properties of food and biomaterials. The department is involved in teaching at Bachelor’s as well as Master’s levels. The courses range from food science and food technology to
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; biotechnology and metabolic engineering; growth and development of plants; the regulation of gene expression; population genetics, genome analysis and the development of breeding systems. Species in use are model
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across all categories and levels of scale. The department is a multidisciplinary, innovative and creative environment that works with current and future societal challenges. Read more about the department
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- or nanoplastics that can be transported downward or horizontally from soils to freshwater environments nearby. Studying the rates of these transport processes helps predicting the current and future exposure