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Found 6 available jobs searching for researcher
21 Feb
Scientists and Engineers
Germany
13 Feb
8 starting & advanced research positions: computer sciences and applied mathematics
France
13 Feb
Experimental physicists/Physics engineers (f/m)
Germany
7 Feb
Postdoctoral fellow in molecular cell biology
Nordland
24 Jan
Research Assistant in the field Of Geomechanics and Geotechnics
France
24 Jan
Geophysicist (part time)
Germany
Our graduate engineers and scientists – drawn from over 30 different European countries – work at the cutting edge of technology, examining the latest inventions in every technical field in order to protect and promote innovation in Europe. If you have a degree in physics, chemistry, engineering or the natural sciences, and an excellent knowledge of one of the Office‘s three official languages (English, French and German) and the ability to understand the other two, you too could be part of our team of patent examiners in Munich, The Hague and Berlin.
Working as a researcher at Inria:
Means contributing to the progress of computer science, in response to society’s major challenges, particularly in the fields of health, environment and the economy.
It also means working within a team, often interacting with the industrial world, with a technology transfer objective in mind.
It means exploring ideas, conceptualising projects, experimenting, publishing research and validating it within the international scientific community.
The European X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Facility GmbH (European XFEL GmbH) is a multi-national non-profit company. It will make available X-rays of unique quality for studies in physics, chemistry, life sciences, materials research and other disciplines. Located in the Hamburg area, Germany, it will comprise scientific instruments for a wide range of experimental techniques. Construction of the European XFEL is underway; its commissioning is scheduled for 2015. The light is created in large undulator systems, which are a unique combination of mechanical engineering, permanent magnet technology and motion control. For the magnetic measurement and tuning, a large magnetic lab is under construction at the EXFEL. For its operation and maintenance we are looking for two
This position is organized within the Molecular Cancer Research Group. The group performs basic research with the main focus on selective autophagy and cell signaling. Autophagy is highly relevant in diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, muscle- and heart diseases and diabetes. We have found that autophagy can act selectively at the molecular level through a specific interaction between a short sequence motif first identified in p62/SQSTM1 and the ATG8 family of ubiquitin-like proteins acting as autophagy receptors. The ATG8 family proteins are lipidated and directly bound to the forming autophagosomes. Our results suggest that p62 and the related protein NBR1 are key players in selective autophagy of ubiquitinated protein aggregates. Both p62 and NBR1 are involved in clearing intracellular bacteria by autophagy and implicated in selective autophagy of peroxisomes and midbodies.
The Geoscience and Geoengineering department is divided into six research teams which cover most of the applied Earth Sciences fields (geology, geophysics, geostatistics, hydrogeology, hydrochemistry, engineering geology and geomechanics). Research activities are generally multidisciplinary and involve several teams of the department, topics spanning from original and fundamental developments to innovative industrial solutions. The department employs 54 tenured researchers, 34 technicians and about 65 Ph. D. students.
The Geosystem department invites applications for a position as Geophysicist (part time)
