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Field
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Distributed radar systems comprise a coherent network of spatially distributed sensors that can be independently transmitting, receiving, or both. By acting in unison, rather than in isolation
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University’s efforts to address this challenge by supporting development of an active network Design Tool for low voltage distribution networks. This tool is a key component of the flagship D-Suite project led
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Almost all radar systems currently transmit from the same location. A drastic departure from this sensing architecture is distributed radar – enacted by a coherent network of spatially distributed
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PhD Studentship: Distributed and Lightweight Large Language Models for Aerial 6G Spectrum Management
-enabled 6G is a nascent field, this project is at a pivotal time to advance our knowledge on how to build distributed and lightweight LLM architectures for 6G spectrum management. The success
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About the Project The future power grid will be a highly complex cyber-physical system, integrating multiple distributed energy resources (DERs) such as solar, wind, marine, and bioenergy alongside
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resilience One of the essential networks for society is water distribution networks. The delivery of water to the customers is affected through different threats to the system. These include: failure
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at scale raises privacy and real hardware constraint concerns. This PhD will focus on those challenges by developing a distributed, privacy-preserving NILM framework, so we can move from small research
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universality within the KPZ class of models. The classical example of universality is the frequent appearance of the normal distribution in nature. This is justified mathematically by the central limit theorem
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appearance of the normal distribution in nature. This is justified mathematically by the central limit theorem. More generally, universality is the property that the large-scale behaviour of some system is
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The marine biota provides an important component of our food systems, yet our knowledge of how many species are being harvested for human use is rather limited, especially among marine invertebrates