58 maynooth-university-programmable-city-project PhD positions at University of Birmingham
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
University of Birmingham and afield. To apply, please click on the 'Apply' button above (physics programme) clearly stating the title of the project and the name of the supervisor (Dr. Miguel Navarro-Cía
-
-electromagnetics ), which will substantially favour collaboration opportunities within University of Birmingham and afield. To apply, please click on the 'Apply' button above (physics programme) or (engineering
-
programme; please do not use any other link to apply to this project or your application may be rejected: https://sits.bham.ac.uk/urd/sits.urd/run/siw_ipp_lgn.login?process=siw_ipp_app&code1=FR167D&code2=0005
-
: To apply, please follow this link, make an account, and submit an application via the university online admissions portal (via the above ‘Apply’ button). This link is unique to the MIBTP programme; please do
-
(y.chen.22@bham.ac.uk ). Funding: The project is available through MIBTP funding program. For more details, please see: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/mibtp/phd/supervisors/ychen References: Shropshire
-
separation from their social group during treatment and recovery). Collection management (such as species breeding programmes) may mean that individuals are moved between institutions and must integrate into a
-
click the above 'Apply' button, make an account, and submit an application via the university online admissions portal. This link is unique to the MIBTP programme; please do not use any other link
-
1. Project overview Electrochemical sensing plays a central role in next-generation health technologies, enabling real-time monitoring of physiological environments with high sensitivity and low
-
described. In this project, we will investigate the roles of NLR genes in the fungal immune system. Our overall objective is to understand how NLR genes contribute to self/non-self recognition and to
-
Join the University of Birmingham for groundbreaking PhD research to make 6G possible! Future radio communication systems (6G and beyond) will use frequencies above 100 GHz to achieve bit rates