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progression-and where we can intervene. This research is supported by the ERC Starting Grant. Start date: Flexible, between 1 March and 1 September 2026. Your position Design, plan, and perform experiments
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, social media, and responsible innovation, this project offers unique, high-impact PhD training within a world-class team. The successful candidate will ideally start work in the first three months of 2026.
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quantum sensing techniques to probe these emergent states. The successful candidate will join a small, collaborative team and be involved in all stages of the research cycle: design and operation of
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. This will be achieved using advanced optical imaging techniques such as Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. To achieve this goal, two positions have been designed. The first
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shape cancer progression-and where we can intervene. This research is supported by the ERC Starting Grant. Start date: Flexible, between 1 March and 1 September 2026. Design, plan, and perform experiments
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unprecedented detail, thereby gaining access to previously overlooked effects, like dynamic disorder, with far-ranging consequences for the design and functional understanding of protein systems. As a PhD student
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: Design and perform experiments using NMR spectroscopy and single-molecule FRET Purify and biochemically characterize proteins and their complexes Analyze and interpret advanced biophysical and single
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evidence-based strategies for depolarisation. If you are motivated by the intersection of ethics, psychology, social media, and responsible innovation, this project offers unique, high-impact PhD training
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DyeCycling to map protein energy landscapes in unprecedented detail, thereby gaining access to previously overlooked effects, like dynamic disorder, with far-ranging consequences for the design and functional
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Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. To achieve this goal, two positions have been designed. The first position (technician) will focus on performing Raman/FTIR on retrieved samples