31 plant PhD scholarships at Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) in Netherlands
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. In this project, we are working with Plant-e on a plant-powered energy harvester, which can provide energy from the plants day and night. Very different from the solid-state energy harvesters such as
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Systems. With a budget of 96 million Euro over the next decade, CropXR focuses on creating eXtra Resilient (XR), sustainable, and climate-adaptive crops. By combining plant biology, simulation modelling
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in the unsaturated zone; draining water via groundwater; sequestering carbon; filtering and breaking down contaminants in groundwater; providing a growth environment for soilorganisms and plant roots
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the most effective inspection and maintenance strategies, while reducing emissions, and network disruptions due to construction works or poor asset structural conditions, among others. This PhD research will
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., URENCO Nederland, Von Gahlen, VSL National Metrology Institute, RIVM National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Wetenschapsknooppunt Radboud Universiteit). In this project you will work
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, at the Department of Imaging Physics. The group works on scattered light microscopy to visualize complex fiber networks. Your task will be to analyze measured scattering signals from different biological tissues
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of robotic learning. The research will especially focus on planning for small drones operating in challenging scenarios, e.g. monitoring plant parameters in greenhouses, where commonly used conventional
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, solar cells, and flat panel display glass panels are all core operations in production and manufacturing systems in high-tech industry, and substrate handling systems can be found everywhere in
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studies have shown they have several important limitations and problems with the generated code. For instance, Copilot, which is based on Codex, has been found to generate code snippets with small bugs
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Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The Magnetic Resonance Systems lab (Mars lab) at TU Delft works relentlessly on the advancement of quantitative