96 parallel-and-distributed-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
-
We are seeking a motivated and Talented experimentalist for a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Modelling of Quantum Computing Control Systems within Professor Ares’ and Professor
-
Baker). The subject of the research project within the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Oxford is to re-programme immune cells as part of a larger programme to develop novel therapeutics
-
permeability selection in variant membrane chemistries. This work will run in parallel to experimental analysis conducted at the University of Exeter using synthetic vesicles to observe permeability
-
to reconstruct the tree-of-life on Earth, it allows us to reveal how biological function has evolved and is distributed on this tree, and it is the foundation that enables us to use model organisms
-
. Armed with this information, the post holder will use cutting-edge paleoclimatic modelling that incorporates nutrient cycling and carbon chemistry (HadOCC) to infer the distribution of potential feeding
-
the universities of Manchester and Oxford. The post-holder will be one of six centre-funded postdoctoral researchers delivering on projects that form our core research programme. They will be a cornerstone of the
-
atmospheric plasmas are inaccurate and do not produce the correct compositions and energy distributions of expanding flows. The proposed research aims to make a step change in domestic and international
-
researchers will extend and apply the ideas of active matter physics in biological contexts, developing theories and cell-scale and continuum computational models. The work will focus on identifying physical
-
of computational biology, molecular biophysics, and cutting-edge analytical technologies. You’ll contribute to the development and application of computational methods to understand protein folding, structure, and
-
social mobility and its relationship to economic inequality. The post holder will work with the INET Oxford programme on Economics, Inequality, and Opportunity. About you You have completed a doctorate in