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this date, in both directions). The position is funded by NERC grant 'High Resolution Radar Imaging of Pyroclastic Density Currents', in collaboration with University College London, and the University
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our expertise in creating ultracold RbCs molecules in the rovibrational ground state and trapping them in rotationally magic traps. The post holders will work directly with Prof. Simon Cornish and other
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-Einstein condensates of molecules. The post holders are therefore expected to have experience and familiarity with the techniques used in the study of ultracold gases, including the operation of magneto
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to deliver industry-relevant tools that enable optimal design and operation of hydrogen technologies in real-world application. The successful candidate will work at the intersection of multi-disciplinary
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candidate genes and regulatory elements underlying differences in organ size among species. This post is fixed term for 10 months due to the funding being available from 01/10/25 for this fixed period only
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studies within the hydrogen research hub (HI-ACT) funded by EPSRC. The project seeks to deliver industry-relevant tools that enable optimal design and operation of hydrogen technologies in real-world
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verification further advancing security and authenticity. In 2020 our pioneering solid-state CPL spectrometer (Nat. Commun., 2020, 11, 1676) triggered a paradigm shift in CPL spectroscopy that has been hindered
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to form ultracold CsYb molecules in optical lattices. The project is a collaboration with researchers in Paris and Warsaw. The post holder will work directly with Prof. Simon Cornish (Physics) and Prof
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Lawrence. SSE1K explores the environmental and climatic changes that have been identified as causes for societal and political processes and events in the Mediterranean in the first millennium CE, combining
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of every life process as the product of aerobic respiration and post-mortem decay. As such, it is not a surprise that this gas regulates such diverse processes as cellular chemical reactions, transport