Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
: finding planets, stars, and black holes through astrometric motion" "The fundamental physics that governs starlight" "First science with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey" "Data-driven methods for stellar
-
I supervise a wide range of projects in surface and materials physics, with a particular focus on novel electronic materials such as topological insulators where electrons can be transported without
-
I supervise projects in particle physics. My main emphasis is on phenomenology, comparison of predictions with experimental measurements. I follow developments in flavour physics: weak decays
-
Monash mentoring program. Not only do I gain satisfaction from helping my student mentees, I've gained leadership and communication skills to help in my future career. Am I eligible? You must be one
-
spectroscopy and Gaia data of star clusters to decipher the mystery of the Lithium-rich giant stars" (with Prof John Lattanzio) "The origin of the heavy elements: Computer simulations of neutron-capture
-
models that can forecast the likely outcomes of current practices. The project aims to develop cutting-edge machine learning and statistical risk prediction techniques to predict each short-term, long-term
-
research training are interested in joining an established multidisciplinary research team led by Associate Professor Peter Poon If this opportunity excites you, we’d love to hear from you! Monash University
-
Inference Tool (GAMBIT) Community to study theoretical frameworks that extend the standard models of particle physics and cosmology, with the aim of uncovering the nature of dark matter, dark forces, and dark
-
of people with disability. These might, for instance, utilise conversational agents, computer vision, mixed reality, wearables etc. Disability, Technology, and Society: Research with a sociological or
-
comparing our experimental observations to predictions made using the Standard Model of Particle Physics. I am a member of the LHCb collaboration, one of the four large experiments at the Large Hadron