68 monash-university PhD positions

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    I am an experimental particle physicist that works on the search for phenomena that are beyond our current theoretical understanding in terms of the Standard Model of Particle Physics. The research is carried out within the LHCb collaboration that runs one of the four large experiments at the...

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    My primary areas of research activity are two fold: first, studing thermonuclear (X-ray) bursts from accreting neutron stars; and second, searches for optical counterparts of gravitational-wave events with the GOTO telescope network. Projects focussing on thermonuclear bursts will involve...

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    I am interested in all aspects of theoretical astrophysics, with a particular focus on strong gravitational fields, compact objects, and gravitational-wave astronomy.  I am currently  exploring the evolution of massive binary stars into compact binaries as sources of gravitational-waves and...

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    Conventional x-ray imaging is firmly established as an invaluable tool in medicine, security, research and manufacturing. However, conventional methods extract only a fraction of the sample information that is encoded in the x-ray wavefield as it passes through the sample. My research aims to...

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    My research focusses on understanding stars: their evolution and chemical composition, and how they move throughout our galaxy. Most of what we know about the universe comes from starlight, but

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    I work on the study of massive and supermassive stars (10-100,000 solar masses); the first generations of stars in the universe (Pop III stars); evolution of rotating massive stars and the spin

  • Monash University | Australia | 2 days ago

    the Universe, e.g., where did the carbon in your bodies come from? What type of star made it? Generally we study stars in their final phases of evolution, when they become ageing red giants which is when

  • Monash University | Melbourne, Victoria | Australia | 1 day ago

    As a pregnancy approaches term (the point at which the foetus is considered fully developed), decisions are made about the timing of birth and the way babies are born. These decisions are incredibly challenging for clinicians and pregnant women. Digital health records, advances in big data,...

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