Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
PhD Opportunity - Indigenous (Energy) Job No.: 685291 Faculty: Faculty of Information Technology, Monash Business School and Faculty of Engineering Location: Caulfield or Clayton campuses Duration
-
with leading researchers in glass science/engineering and diffraction physics/crystallography in Australia and around the world. "Local structure and symmetry in metallic glasses" (with Assoc Prof Scott
-
guardrails or clear precedent, humanity now contends with a technology that has potential to reshape valued parts of our social life, individually and collectively. In assessing the impacts of generative
-
exciting, rewarding directions The Opportunity: We are seeking expressions of interest talented candidates who wish to apply for a PhD to undertake research in digital health technology and implementation
-
from entering a PhD with a pre-existing structure. Finally, the candidate will benefit from being part of outcomes from the research, which may include co-authored publications (where the candidate’s
-
For over a century, X-rays have been used to visualise the internal structure of opaque objects, driving major breakthroughs in healthcare, industry, and scientific research. Conventional X-ray
-
to biomedical applications. Students will have access to our X-ray imaging laboratory in the New Horizons Research Centre for developing new technology. We also regularly perform experiments at the Australian
-
surveys and targeted observations are used to search for active galactic nuclei, trace star formation and measure stellar kinematics within galaxies. How galaxies grow within structures dark matter can be
-
these methods to understand the atomic structure and properties of a range of materials being developed for efficient solar cells, light generation, batteries, superconductors, photonics and nanoelectronics. We
-
diagnosis is very high. A hallmark of active disease is matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) causing distinct changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM) based on their capacity to cleave structural proteins