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Research Fellow in Computational Continuum Mechanics available at the Njord Centre, Department of Physics. No one can be appointed for more than one PhD Research Fellowship period at the University of Oslo
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Computational Continuum Mechanics available at the Njord Centre, Department of Physics. No one can be appointed for more than one PhD Research Fellowship period at the University of Oslo. Starting date is
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performance during the last five years. A PhD within hydrogeology, geology/geophysics, physics, hydrology or other relevant fields and have a strong scientific track record within hydrogeology, contaminant
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to learn computational methods and/or contribute to data analysis to further support our findings. The position is open to applicants with a PhD degree in molecular biology, cancer research, cancer genomics
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at Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, UiO and in close collaboration with Dr. Michael A. Riegler at Simula Research Laboratories and Dr. Jorrit Enserink at the Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University
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must hold a degree equivalent to a Norwegian doctoral degree in astronomy, physics, statistics, informatics or related topics. Candidates are encouraged to apply before the completion of their PhD degree
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teaching in most of the domains of geoscience; geology, geophysics, physical geography, geomatics, hydrology, meteorology and oceanography. The Department is the broadest geoscience research and education
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to learn computational methods and/or contribute to data analysis to further support our findings. The position is open to applicants with a PhD degree in molecular biology, cancer research, cancer genomics
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at Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, UiO and in close collaboration with Dr. Michael A. Riegler at Simula Research Laboratories and Dr. Jorrit Enserink at the Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University
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. As a postdoctoral fellow in this group, you will be part of a large and active community working together to model and understand the physics of the universe from the Milky Way to the Big Bang