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The project: Electromagnetic (EM) sensing is on the brink of a step-change. Once limited by computation and data-processing power, EM sensing is now being transformed by advances in high-performance
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of realising an optical-pump TeraHertz-probe polarisation-resolved near-field microscope, this PhD research programme will look at combining spintronic THz emitters and near-field photoconductive probes
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-electromagnetics ), which will substantially favour collaboration opportunities within University of Birmingham and afield. To apply, please click on the 'Apply' button above (physics programme) or (engineering
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, Asian and Minority Ethnic. The research programme will take place in the interdisciplinary environment of the Communication and Electromagnetics group (https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres
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essential. Prior experience/knowledge in Electromagnetism, COMSOL, microfabrication, and PCB design are desirable but not essential. Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in the UK, with over 55 000 new
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. This research is ideally suited to candidates with interests in photonics, metamaterials, ultrafast optics, nanofabrication, and computational electromagnetism. Strong coding (Python /MATLAB) and experimental
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systems. These Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) combine physical processes with digital computation, and are therefore exposed to threats in both domains. While security measures such as encryption and
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, an interest in biomedical research, and the ability to work independently are essential. Prior experience/knowledge in Electromagnetism, COMSOL, microfabrication, and PCB design are desirable but not essential
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physics of electromagnetic materials and practical applications in 6G communications. The PhD is 4 years and funded by DSTL (Defence Science and Technology Laboratory), and you will undertake a mixture of
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ultrafast, energy-efficient magnetic switching, a key step toward faster and greener computing. This PhD will pioneer THz spintronics — a new frontier where ultrafast optics meets magnetism. Using femtosecond