15 Electrical Engineering Postdoctoral research jobs at Delft University of Technology
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Challenge: Develop a climate model that enables climate optimized flight trajectories to be achieved at robust manner. Change: Improve the current climate model with broadening their geographical
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partners from industry. Job description The SuperGPS-2 project is carried out jointly by the TU Delft Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, and Computer Sciences (EEMCS) and the Faculty of Civil
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you to apply. Your application will receive fair consideration. Challenge. Change. Impact! The Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS) brings together three
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research group. The group belongs to the Intelligent Electrical Power Grids (IEPG) Section of the Electrical Sustainable Energy (ESE) Department, which is part of the Electrical Engineering, Mathematics,and
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that will revolutionize current assembly processes, reducing their cost and environmental impact. You will collaborate with both academic and industrial scientists and engineers, and benefit from prior
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Delft as well as in collaboration with the project partners. As candidate, you have a PhD degree in electrical engineering, materials engineering, micro/nanoengineering, physics or related fields. We
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fair consideration. Challenge. Change. Impact! The Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS) brings together three scientific disciplines. Combined, they reinforce each
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. Candidates for this challenging project should have a PhD degree and background in e.g., systems and control, computer science, applied mathematics, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, or chemical
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of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS) brings together three scientific disciplines. Combined, they reinforce each other and are the driving force behind the technology we all use in
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at the molecular scale, we need to understand dynamic structural changes underlying many essential biomolecular processes in the cell. This requires new experimental methods, as current technology only facilitates