Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. The successful candidate will have an engineering background and expertise in the development and deployment of radar-based technology for geophysical monitoring, and in the processing and interpreting of data
-
The Role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Department of Engineering with a particular emphasis on hydrogen technologies. The EPSRC project, UNISON, seeks to improve
-
The Role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate position in the Department of Engineering, with a focus on digital twin modelling for marine engines and propulsion systems
-
of every life process as the product of aerobic respiration and post-mortem decay. As such, it is not a surprise that this gas regulates such diverse processes as cellular chemical reactions, transport
-
entity produce different handedness (left or right) of light. Lanthanide complexes can be engineered to emit CPL, which encodes chiral molecular fingerprints in luminescence spectra that cannot be decoded
-
to form ultracold CsYb molecules in optical lattices. The project is a collaboration with researchers in Paris and Warsaw. The post holder will work directly with Prof. Simon Cornish (Physics) and Prof
-
The Role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the field of Quantitative Sedimentology and Geophysics of Seafloor Processes. The successful applicant will be part of two major NERC funded projects to make the first detailed measurements of turbidity currents in action...
-
. The position is associated with a project funded by the EURAMET - the metrology component of the European Union Horizon 2020 Programme. The post holder will be expected to display the initiative and creativity
-
. This post is fixed term for 36 months - funding is available for this fixed period. The post-holder is employed to work on research/a research project which will be led by another colleague. Whilst this means
-
in Paris and Warsaw. The post holder will work directly with Prof. Simon Cornish (Physics) and Prof. Jeremy Hutson (Chemistry), and their research teams in the Quantum Light and Matter group