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19 Fully Funded PhD Positions at University of Groningen, Netherlands

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Are you holding Master’s degree and ready to elevate your academic journey to the highest level? University of Groningen, Netherlands, has announced a multiple fully funded PhD positions awaiting talented individuals like you. Don’t miss your chance to be part of our vibrant academic community. Explore the exciting PhD positions available and submit your application today!”

Candidates interested in fully funded PhD positions can check the details and may apply as soon as possible. 

 

(01) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position Human versus Artificial: A Radical Embodied Turing Test (1.0 FTE) (V24.0397)

The rise of AI is accompanied by an equal rise of the worry about how to distinguish human-made from AI-generated output. In this project we investigate both the structural differences between human-made and AI-generated output as well as people’s differential behavioural and physiological responses to them. Concretely, we will study: (1) the spatiotemporal patterns of human-made and AI-generated images/artworks, texts and conversations; (2) people’s behavioural and physiological responses when viewing and reading human-made and AI-generated images/artworks and texts, respectively; (3) the extent and effects of synchronisation when people engage in conversations with chatbots. The goal is to develop a Radical Embodied Turing Test (RETT), on which next-generation AI-detection tools can be based and which can also help to enhance user experience with AI.

Deadline : October 1st, 2024.

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(02) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:–  PhD position Reading the Female Body in the Early Modern Low Countries (1500-1800) (V24.0346)

This project aims to work towards a better understanding of the interplay between the discourses and cultural industries that produced imaginations and knowledge about female bodies in the Low Countries between roughly 1500 and 1800. It reconstructs the interconnection between various discourses about female and male anatomy and sexuality and contextualizes those discourses in the specific historical and cultural circumstances of the Low Countries. The project’s main research questions are: How were female bodies viewed, defined and represented in academic, literary, artistic, medical, legal and/ or philosophical early modern Dutch (and/ or Neo-Latin) discourses? How were views and representations of sex and gender changed and shaped by the specific historical conditions and developments in the Low Countries between 1500-1800?

In the PhD project, jointly supervised by Dr Karen Hollewand (Cultural Heritage, Identity, and Early Modern History) and Dr Lucas van der Deijl (Historical Dutch Literature) and with Prof. Bart Ramakers (Historical Dutch Literature) or Prof. Rina Knoeff (Early Modern Medical History) as promotor, the selected candidate will identify their own interdisciplinary focus and interest within the broad framework set out above. Candidates are asked to formulate and explain their focus in a research proposal, in which they describe the research idea, possible primary sources, and academic disciplines relevant to the project. Please note that an interdisciplinary focus is fundamental to this project, which means that candidates are encouraged to find connections between different disciplines and types of sources. A more extensive outline of the project, including a list of potential sources and methods, can be requested from the project PI’s (see the contact info below).

Since its foundation in 1614, the University of Groningen has established an international reputation as a dynamic and innovative university offering high-quality teaching and research. Its 34,000 students are encouraged to develop their own individual talents through challenging study- and career paths. The University of Groningen is an international centre of knowledge: It belongs to the best research universities in Europe and is allied with prestigious partner universities and networks worldwide.

Deadline : Open until filled

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(03) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:–  PhD position in Global rap performance (1.0 FTE) (V24.0374)

This project aims to elucidate how rap in its various forms relates to linguistic and musical diversity. It explores the ways in which rap cultures move, migrate and manifest new approaches to MCing and its (live) performance, thinking through how (minority) languages and local musical histories affect creative output. Performance is a central theme, and the PhD candidate will explore how tenets of Black Atlantic practice (such as antiphony) are re-performed or re-worked depending on context.

Candidates will be expected to have a Master’s degree in an appropriate discipline (e.g., linguistics, musicology, cultural studies, anthropology), and have existing research interest – and ideally practitioner’s experience – on rap cultures, broadly speaking. Additionally, candidates are expected to have an affinity for multidisciplinarity and a desire to work on the intersection of musicology and linguistics. Furthermore, applicants from global majority backgrounds are especially recommended to apply.

The PhD candidate will be enrolled in the Graduate School for the Humanities (GSH), and embedded within both the Center for Language and Cognition Groningen (CLCG) and the Groningen Research Institute for the Study of Culture (ICOG). With Prof. Merel Keijzer as the professor of record, this project is primarily supervised by linguist Dr Steven Gilbers, who brings expertise in linguistic diversity and the analysis of (collaborative) rap, and musicologist Dr Alex de Lacey, who brings expertise in live performance in grime and hip-hop.

Deadline :  23 September 2024 

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(04) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD Position in Biophysics (V24.0413)

The Heinemann Lab at the University of Groningen (Netherlands) aims to understand how cellular metabolism functions and how metabolism controls other cellular processes.

The lab has recently found that cellular metabolism does not operate beyond a certain Gibbs energy dissipation rate (Niebel et al, 2019, Nature Metabolism). This observation could explain why cancer cells use a particular mode of metabolism. We are now highly interested to uncover the molecular mechanism that is responsible for this thermodynamic limit. Here, we hypothesize that enzymes during their catalysis get actively displaced in space, inducing increased molecular motion in the cell and mixing up the cytoplasm. We have described this hypothesis in a recent perspective article (Losa et al, 2022, Molecular Systems Biology).

In this project, we like to explore the above mentioned hypothesis. To this end, we will use the bacterium E. coli as a model and will perform highly sophisticated experiments with super-resolution microscopy and dynamic particle tracking techniques to measure diffusion rates in cells. Furthermore, in model-based experimental analyses, we aim to determine the Gibbs energy dissipation rates under different metabolic conditions. Together, this will hopefully give us further insights.

Exploring how an active metabolism as an out-of-equilibrium system induces intracellular motion is not only a great scientific adventure, with the potential to open up a new avenue how dynamic cellular metabolism might control cellular processes (i.e. through motion), but it also harbors significant potential for medicine and biotechnology, where metabolism plays a key role.

Deadline : 16 September 2024

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(05) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:–  PhD Psychological Guidance for Youngsters in Early Modern Times (1.0 FTE) (V24.0395)

Contemporary “psychological society” emphasizes psychological identity. It can be interpreted as a historical shift towards individuality which began in the early modern period. It was the time when humanists relied on the theory of humors and temperaments to assess a person´s intellectual capacities and emotional inclinations. The idea was not only to explain the way human beings act but also to find useful guidelines for the counselling of young people. One example of such a psychological work of the 16th century was Juan Huarte de San Juan’s “The Examination of Men’s Wits” (1575). In it, the Spanish physician emphasizes human differences, drawing inspiration from Aristotle, Galen, Hippocrates, and others. The exploration of body humors led to the revolutionary idea that evaluating individual capacities and talents is essential for ensuring a well-functioning society.
Despite the research that has been done to this date showing that early modernity was a crucial time period when human beings start to become an object of empirical study, there are still many open questions. At the time, Erasmus, Vives, or Huarte circulated explanations about human differences using a terminology based on “ingenium” (intellect) and “natural ability”. They used such terms when proposing guidelines to match individuals with societal needs, a strategy that awaits thorough historical assessment. The work of these humanists has remained relatively obscure in today´s history of psychology textbooks. Thus, more research is needed to examine the humanists’ psychological concepts and the extent to which their temperamental psychology contributed to a new understanding of the individual.

Deadline : 16 September 2024

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(06) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position Multiscale modelling of hydrogen-induced fatigue in steels 1.0 FTE (V24.0407)

For the HyTROS project awarded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO) on hydrogen transport, offshore and storage, a PhD position for the period is available in the context of modelling hydrogen embrittlement of pipeline steels. In this project, the University of Groningen, in collaboration with TU Delft, will unravel the fundamental origin of hydrogen-induced fatigue crack growth by a multi-scale modelling approach. The focus of this position is the atomistic modelling of crack propagation in steels in presence of hydrogen and inhibiting gases (e.g. ppm oxygen), as well as scale bridging from atomistic to microscale crystal plasticity simulations. This includes the development of a quantum-accurate interatomic potential to study crack propagation and hydrogen embrittlement in pipeline steels.

It is well known that hydrogen enhances the fatigue crack growth (HFCG) rate. The physical mechanism at the origin of this phenomenon is however unknown. Detailed understanding of HFCG would allow for optimal usage of (existing) pipelines for hydrogen transport. Furthermore, recent investigations have revealed that mixing small ppm oxygen/inhibiting gases could mitigate HFCG, yet the reason for this is not understood. This project aims at providing a mechanistic model for HFCG and unraveling the mechanism behind gaseous inhibition of HFCG.

The successful candidate will be co-supervised by dr. Francesco Maresca from the Computational Mechanical and Materials Engineering (CMME) unit of the Engineering and Technology institute Groningen (ENTEG) and by Prof. Erik van der Giessen from the Micromechanics unit of the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials.

Deadline : 2 September 2024 

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(07) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhDs Artificial Design of Phosphoramidites for Asymmetric Catalysis in Water (2.0 FTE) (V24.0365)

We are looking for two PhD candidates for a joint project between the groups of Prof. Ben Feringa and Dr Robert Pollice, that will be carried out within the framework of the Dutch Growth Fund initiative “Big Chemistry” (https://bigchemistry.nl/). The program “Big Chemistry” was established to position the Netherlands as a global leader in chemical robotics combined with artificial intelligence. By building an autonomous ‘RobotLab’, large numbers of experiments can be carried out, yielding comprehensive datasets on properties of molecular systems.

In this project, we will leverage the combined power of self-driving laboratories and artificial intelligence to accelerate the discovery of phosphoramidite ligands focusing on their use for catalytic reactions in water. Phosphoramidites are monodentate organophosphorus ligands that are effective in a wide range of asymmetric catalytic transformations. Importantly, their combination with other monodentate ligands can result in a substantial enhancement of their catalytic activity and selectivity. This, in conjunction with the modularity of phosphoramidite building blocks, offers a vast chemical space for potential ligands. Furthermore, the development of robust catalytic systems for green processes in water marks one of the current challenges of the chemical industry. Achieving more ambitious sustainability goals necessitates a gradual transition from classical, often halogenated organic solvents to environmentally friendly alternatives. Our project aims to address these challenges by creating innovative, sustainable catalytic systems using phosphoramidite ligands.

Hence, one part of the project will focus on the development of efficient modular synthesis methods for phosphoramidites that can be implemented in automated robotics setups, whereas the second part will focus on exploring novel catalytic conversions, including asymmetric catalysis, in water using robotic screening while expanding the phosphoramidite ligand family and taking advantage of the novel mixed monodentate ligand approach.

The positions we are offering will be within the group of Prof. Ben Feringa, in close collaboration with the group of Dr Robert Pollice, embedded within the Stratingh Institute for Chemistry, which is part of the Faculty of Science and Engineering (FSE) at the University of Groningen.

Deadline : 2 September 2024

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(08) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position Chemical Origin of Primordial Cells in the First Ocean (1.0 FTE) (V24.0255)

We invite applications from outstanding candidates, for a PhD position aimed at advancing research on the chemical origins of life on Earth, with a specific focus on our recently funded Protocell Project.

The origin of life on Earth stands as one of the great mysteries of science. Researchers have long concluded that the chemical reactions that allowed life to emerge took place in microscopic compartments, called protocells. However, it is still not known how these protocells were formed. In the context of an NWO-Vici research program, we will explore the possibility that protocells were made of lipids, formed by solar irradiation of a primordial oil layer that covered the ocean. This explorative work will include studies of chemical reactivity, molecular self-assembly and the physico-chemical behavior of plausible lipids (primarily fatty acids).

The results of this research will also apply to an important contemporary issue: the mitigation of environmental damage by treatment and removal of the oil layers that pollute the ocean.

Deadline : 2 September 2024

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(09) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD positions on Supramolecular Approaches to Improve RNA Stability (2.0 FTE) (V24.0254)

We are looking for two PhD candidates for a joint project between the groups of Prof. Tibor Kudernac, Prof. Wesley Browne, and Prof. Nathalie Katsonis, that will be carried out within the framework of the Growth Fund initiative “Big Chemistry” (https://bigchemistry.nl/). The program ‘Big Chemistry’ has received over 90 million euros from the National Growth Fund to position the Netherlands as a global leader in chemical robotics combined with artificial intelligence. In this context, it becomes possible to collect large datasets on properties of molecular systems.

The core scientific challenge that will be addressed within this case study is the stability of RNA strands in water. RNA is well-known to be unstable in aqueous solutions, which is why, e.g., RNA vaccines, have to be stored at quite low temperatures. RNA degradation in water at room temperature is primarily driven by intramolecular transesterification, that leads to the cleavage of phosphodiester bonds and fragmentation of the RNA chain. It has been hypothesized that this intermolecular transesterification can occur only in specific conformations.

You will investigate this hypothesis systematically, and you will develop supramolecular strategies to control RNA conformation reversibly. Additionally, you will explore the correlation between RNA conformation and its catalytic properties. Ultimately, the outcomes of this research in chemistry will provide supramolecular solutions to pressing healthcare challenges.

Deadline : 2 September 2024 

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(10) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD on the topic: FPGA-based computing system design (1.0 FTE) (V24.0372)

Field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) have a distinct advantage over fixed-function application-specific integrated circuits due to their reconfiguration capability. However, this reconfiguration comes at the cost of performance. This PhD position aims to bridge this performance gap through customizations, while maintaining substantial flexibility and scalability.

Deadline : 30 August 2024

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(11) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD on the topic: Privacy Preserving Computer Architectures (1.0 FTE) (V24.0371)

The University of Groningen and the Groningen Cognitive Systems and Materials has an opening for a PhD candidate to work within CogniGron’s NeuroPrivate project.

The NeuroPrivate project aims to implement privacy-preserving computing platforms using emerging technology, such as resistive random-access memory (ReRAM), phase-change memory, magnetic memory, and ferroelectric memory. The project explores one of the emerging and market-ready technologies, such as ReRAM, to implement fully homomorphic encryption functionality at the Edge and make it extensible to the cloud. The eventual goal of the NeuroPrivate project is to design and demonstrate an energy-efficient homomorphic processing architecture platform leveraging the capabilities of an emerging technology.

Deadline : 30 August 2024

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(12) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:–  PhDs legal aspects of the development of HVDC – Doctoral Network ‘Inter-oPEn’ (V24.0018)

A consortium of 8 universities forms the consortium ‘Inter-oPEn’ to work on the development of HVDC electricity networks. The consortium stands out for coupling the technical developments with the legal aspects in order to foster innovation in the energy sector. The project is funded by the European Union as a Marie Curie doctoral training network (https://marie-sklodowska-curie-actions.ec.europa.eu/(…)ns/doctoral-networks). At the University of Groningen, we have two 4-year PhD vacancies. The two PhDs will focus on energy law and technology law respectively.

Deadline : 29 August 2024

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(13) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position: Transnational city networks in the twin transition (V24.0390)

We are offering a 36-month PhD position (full time, 1.0 FTE) within the Horizon Europe project Rethinking Co-creation of Digital and Environmental Policy in Systems of Multilevel Governance (RECODE-MLG), under the direction of Dr Pier Domenico Tortola (page: https://www.rug.nl/staff/p.d.tortola/), coordinator of the University of Groningen unit of RECODE-MLG.

RECODE-MLG will analyse the functioning, limits, and opportunities of multilevel governance systems—in the first place the European Union one—in the area of the twin (energy and digital) transition, focusing particularly on co-creation as a tool for effective and legitimate policy-making and implementation. The project will be carried out by a consortium of nine partners across Europe, working from different disciplinary angles and promoting the participation of a variety of stakeholders. In addition to advancing scholarship on the topics covered by the project, RECODE-MLG aims to formulate actionable advice for policy-makers at different levels of government.

The University of Groningen unit of RECODE-MLG, within which the PhD candidate will be embedded, will focus primarily on transnational municipal networks (TMNs) as actors as well as arenas of policy co-creation. The prospective doctoral candidate is expected to work at the intersection of the multilevel governance and TMN scholarships, advancing both by formulating conceptual and theoretical connections between them, proposing explanatory arguments on the origins, functions and effects of TMNs within Europe’s system of multilevel governance, and validating these by means of empirical investigations in areas connected with the twin transition, but also beyond, where appropriate.

The PhD candidate will be a member of the Graduate School for the Humanities of the University of Groningen, and affiliated with the Groningen Research Institute for the Study of Culture (ICOG). In addition, the PhD candidate will be connected with the Chair group of European Politics and Society.

Deadline : 26 August 2024

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(14) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position on the project “Your place is the show” (1.0 FTE) (V24.0375)

Fully funded PhD position in Media Studies at the Faculty of Arts, University of Groningen on the project “Your place is the show”: A multi-actor analysis of platformised reality TV-induced tourism in Asia.

This PhD project offers a unique opportunity to work in an international environment and to acquire valuable research experience at a top-ranked European university. As a PhD student, you will develop your own research project in consultation with the associated supervisors. You will conduct independent and original academic research and report results via peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations, and ultimately a PhD dissertation. The PhD thesis has to be completed within four years. You will also have the opportunity to (further) develop your teaching skills.

Deadline : 21 August 2024

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(15) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position in Medieval Studies (1.0 FTE) (V24.0350)

Fully funded PhD position in Medieval Studies at the Faculty of Arts, University of Groningen (start date: February 2025) in the project “New Approaches to Medieval Travel: Cultural Interactions and Religions of the Fifteenth-Century in Textual and Material Sources”.

This PhD project offers a unique opportunity to work in an international, diverse environment and to acquire valuable research experience at a top-ranked European university. The successful candidate will have the opportunity to develop their academic writing skills, support outreach activities in the Netherlands and abroad, undertake archival work and gain teaching experience. The candidate will be embedded in the Chair Group of Medieval English Literature and Culture.

Deadline : 20 August 2024 

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(16) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhDs on legal aspects of Floating Offshore Wind Energy – project ‘HybridLabs’ (2.0 FTE) (V24.0358)

A large consortium of research universities and companies is going to work on the development of innovative floating offshore wind technologies in the Netherlands and Ireland, under the umbrella of the project ‘HybridLabs’. Next to developing both digital models and physical labs for floating offshore wind, there is also a work package on societal implementation of these innovative technologies, which addresses ecological impact, training of the workforce and supply chain readiness, as well as the legal framework for the implementation of these technologies. The two PhD researchers will contribute to this work package.

Deadline :16 August 2024

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(17) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position Place and Identity in Journalism in Former Yugoslavia (V24.0351)

Applications are invited for a fully-funded four-year PhD position at the intersection of the fields of Journalism Studies and Architecture, focusing on the role of material space and artifacts in the construction of journalistic identity and practice in former Yugoslavia.

Place and Identity in Journalism in Former Yugoslavia inquires into the role of architecture in journalism and its impact on the formation of journalistic identities and placemaking. Scholarship examining the role of place in journalism has found that buildings, their locations within urban spaces, as well as their interiors (layout, material artifacts etc.) can shape journalistic identity and work, and its relationship with and perceptions by the public. Redirecting our focus away from architectural styles and journalism in the West, this project explores place and identity in post-socialist regions, precisely former Yugoslavia, a former communist federation with a unique socio-cultural and political history intertwined with historical Ottoman and Byzantine heritage, twentieth-century modernist and brutalist-built environment, and the contemporary urban and architectural transformations. Drawing on concepts and theories from journalism studies and architecture and urbanism – in particular pertaining to place-making, nationalism and nation-building, and urban and socio-political identity as represented in the built environment – the project examines the role of place and identity in journalism in former Yugoslavia (1945-1995) and in various locations across the current post-Yugoslav nations (1995-now).

This PhD project offers a unique opportunity to work in an international and interdisciplinary environment and to acquire valuable research experience. Under the joint supervision of Dr Sandra Banjac and Dr Maja Babic, with Prof Marcel Broersma as the professor of record, the successful candidate will develop a specific research focus within these broad parameters, depending on their own interests and research experience. A particularly welcome research focus could be a comparative exploration of how diverse architectural styles and influences uniquely shape journalists’ occupational identities and work, and/or how the role of place in journalism changed (or remained stable) throughout the history and geo-political shifts in former Yugoslavia. To do so, the PhD candidate will analyze digital and analogue archival material and diverse forms of communication, including text, images, video and audio recordings of journalistic work broadly, architectural and urban planning and design, public discourse on journalism etc., as well as conduct oral history interviews with journalists retired and currently employed in the countries of former Yugoslavia. For further information on the project, we are happy to send applicants a full project proposal on request.

Deadline : 13 August 2024

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(18) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:–  PhD in Intelligent Information & Incentive Design for Cyber-Physical Systems (V24.0341)

A fully funded PhD position is available at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. The PhD project focuses on utilizing control theory, optimization, and learning algorithms to design intelligent system operators that guide user behavior toward socially desirable outcomes. By integrating theory with practical applications, the research aims to transform how we navigate cyber-physical systems in the digital age, with applications in power systems and traffic networks, where user interactions with the system operator are essential.

Apart from the research project, the candidate is expected to contribute (~10% of total workload) to the teaching and supervision of Bachelor and Master students.

The position will be supervised by Prof. Nima Monshizadeh and Prof. Bayu Jayawardhana, and the candidate will be embedded at the Engineering Technology Institute of the University of Groningen (ENTEG). ENTEG research is highly multidisciplinary in nature and focuses on both fundamental and applied research. The candidate will be a member of the Jan C. Willems Center for Systems and Control which is recognized for its long tradition in mathematical systems theory and its strength in linear/nonlinear systems analysis and control of complex networks. According to the Shanghai Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) 2023, Automation and Control Engineering at the University of Groningen is ranked 3rd in Europe and 19th worldwide.

Deadline : Open until filled

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(19) Fully Funded PhD Position 

PhD position summary/title:– PhD position to work on the dark side of star formation (V24.0311)

The stratospheric balloon mission GUSTO has just completed its 55-day flight over Antarctica, making measurements of far-infrared C+ and N+ line emission which is unobservable from the ground. The galactic plane survey covers 50 square degrees and the LMC map 1.5 square degrees, including deep coverage of the 30 Dor region. The high-resolution GUSTO spectra are expected to provide new insights into the process of star formation in interstellar clouds, in particular the effect of feedback from young stars on their birth environment.

Funding is now available for a PhD candidate to analyze the GUSTO data at the University of Groningen in The Netherlands. The successful candidate will compare the GUSTO maps with observations in ground-based tracers of atomic and molecular clouds. The student will use state-of-the-art analysis tools, taking advantage of the high spectral resolution of the GUSTO data, to identify signatures of radiative and mechanical feedback in the gas clouds surrounding young stars. The position is co-supervised by Floris van der Tak (SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research) and Xander Tielens (University of Maryland).

Deadline : Open until filled

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About The University of Groningen, Netherlands  –Official Website

The University of Groningen is a public research university in the city of Groningen in the Netherlands. The university was founded in 1614 and is the second-oldest university in the Netherlands. In 2014, the university celebrated its 400th anniversary. Currently, RUG is placed in the top 100 universities worldwide according to three international ranking tables.

The university was ranked 65th in the world, according to Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) in 2019. In April 2013, according to the results of the International Student Barometer, the University of Groningen, for the third time in a row, was voted the best university of the Netherlands.

The University of Groningen has eleven faculties, nine graduate schools, 27 research centres and institutes, and more than 175-degree programmes. The university’s alumni and faculty include Johann Bernoulli, Aletta Jacobs, four Nobel Prize winners, nine Spinoza Prize winners, one Stevin Prize winner, royalty, multiple mayors, the first president of the European Central Bank, and a secretary general of NATO.

 

 

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