31 computer-science "Department of Computer Science" positions at University of Copenhagen in Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
) Duties and Responsibilities Further information about the PhD study programme is available on the website of Copenhagen Graduate School of Social Sciences: https://samf.ku.dk/phd-skolen/english/ Under
-
PhD Project in Molecular Magnetic Materials Department of Chemistry Faculty of SCIENCE University of Copenhagen Department of Chemistry, Section for Inorganic Chemistry invites applicants for a PhD
-
We are looking for a Mass Spectrometry Imaging Specialist to work on MALDI-MSI of plant tissues in The Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Section for Plant Biochemistry, at Faculty
-
The Center for Health Data Science (HeaDS) is looking to hire a student employee to assist with practical and administrative tasks. The start date would be 1 August 2024 or as soon as possible
-
We are looking for a skilled computational research assistant for a 1-year position at the Globe Institute, who will be tasked with computational assembly, QC and annotation of vertebrate genomes
-
Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, and promote basic and applied research. CPR and BRIC host research groups of different disciplines ranging from systems biology, proteomics, and chemical biology
-
responsibilities outside of your own core tasks. Place of employment The place of employment is at the Department of Drug Design and Pharmacology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen
-
of Biology, nds @ bio.ku.dk , phone: +45 26 44 97 22. Principal supervisor Professor, Karsten Kristiansen, Department of Biology. The PhD programme Qualifications needed for the program To be eligible
-
or Computer Science and be active in the field of quantum computation, ideally applied to chemistry or life science. The assistant professor’s duties will primarily include research, including obligations with regard
-
theoretical and computational models with quantitative experiments and collaborate across physics, biology and medicine. Our current focus is on what cells can achieve collectively, how far can they go beyond