24 distributed-systems-networks-phd Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Cambridge
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research skills, provide instruction or plan/ deliver seminars relating to the research area. The successful candidates will have a PhD (or expect to soon be awarded) in the physical or biological sciences
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 36 months in the first instance. We are looking for a Post-Doctoral Research Associate (PDRA), with a PhD in Physics, Materials Science or
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://degradationproject.com/ ) and NEXGENNa (http://nexgenna.org/ ) projects and participation in regular relevant FI meetings. Applicants should hold (or be about to obtain) a PhD in Chemistry, Materials Science, or a closely
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at the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge to work on the BBSRC grant "A Platform for Identifying GlycoRNA and Identifying Biases in RNA Pulldown". The role is to develop methods
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of the Solar Atmospheric Modelling Suite (SAMS) a next-generation, modular simulation framework for the solar atmosphere, tackling the chromosphere/corona problem. SAMS is being designed to incorporate world
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research skills, and deliver seminars relating to the research area. The successful candidate should possess a PhD in Applied Analysis of Geophysical Fluid Models. Limit of tenure: 1 year in the first
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of instruction and the planning / delivery of seminars relating to their research area. The successful candidate will have completed (or expect to soon be awarded) a PHD in Theoretical Physics or closely related
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to ionising radiation and clinically relevant drugs. A strong focus of this research is to study the specific functions of key DNA repair enzymes in high detail, how they function as a network to facilitate
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 1 year in the first instance. The faculty of Economics is looking to hire a Postdoctoral Research Associate starting August 2025, although
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We are seeking a motivated and skilled in vivo Research Assistant to join the group of Professor Richard Gilbertson at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute. The Gilbertson lab is dedicated