45 parallel-and-distributed-computing-phd PhD positions at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
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This PhD project is at the intersection of electromagnetism, numerical methods, and high-performance parallel computing, with application towards the design and optimisation of integrated circuits
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tested by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) or microscale thermophoresis (MST) in collaboration with the lab of Prof. Andy Lovering. In parallel, minibinder/effector pairs will be co-expressed using
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. Yet, many stellar and planetary parameters remain systematically uncertain due to limitations in stellar modelling and data interpretation. This PhD project will develop Bayesian Hierarchical Models
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, providing direct evidence of the organism in that location. They can also provide major insights into organisms’ distribution and palaeobiology, such as speed and nature of locomotion, anatomy, behaviour
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International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 395 (June-August 2023), has shown tipping point behaviour during the Pliocene in the deep-water return flow of the AMOC (Sinneseal et al. 2025). The aim
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avenues by enabling chronic, gut-based monitoring of neuroendocrine activity for applications such as closed loop therapeutics. The proposed PhD project sits at the interface of biomedical engineering
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Global biodiversity targets are repeatedly not met despite increasing conservation efforts. While in some cases this is due to inappropriate interventions or external pressures, in other cases, this is due to time lags in species’ responses to conservation efforts. Ecological time lags occur...
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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
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between these molecules to engineer new quantum states. However, so far it is not well known how to achieve entanglement with molecules with such plasmonic systems. This PhD project will focus on developing
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. This PhD project will explore a novel approach: leveraging polymeric microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology to create a miniaturised micropump-based ingestible capsule that can actively deliver