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candidates with a background in meteorology, climatology, physics, and any related discipline, and a strong interest in applying advanced physical and computational methods to real-world challenges in the area
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that suppress resistance gene transfer. Combining biophysics, microbiology, and materials science, the project will generate insights into how physical environments can be harnessed to control AMR. Approach and
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cultivation and molecular cloning Quantitative data analysis and process optimisation Synthetic and molecular biology techniques Research design, interdisciplinary collaboration, and scientific communication
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Start Date: Between 1 August 2026 and 1 July 2027 Introduction: Richard Feynman famously quoted ‘turbulence is the most important unsolved problem of classical physics’. Understanding and modelling
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an increasingly complex development environment. Areas to consider that impact the modelling are: Framework Language Process How wide / how deep i.e. what do we model and why? How much provides a good answer i.e
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computing and the use of GPU clusters. Entry Requirements Acceptable first degree - Computer Science/Physics/Maths The standard minimum entry requirement is 2:1. First class in bachelor degree or a master
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(computer vision technologies). The interdisciplinary nature of this PhD will require the integration of environmental science, engineering, and community science methodologies. Supervisors: Primary
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through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The Faculty of Medicine Health and Life
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(minimum 2.1 honours or equivalent) in a STEM subject including Computer Science, Data Science, Engineering, Physics or Maths. A relevant MSc/MEng is desirable but strong candidates without postgraduate
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coherence, and non-Markovianity therefore become important both for fundamental physics and for eventual practical applications. In this PhD project, we will develop the theory for quantum-optical protocols