17 postdoc-in-distributed-systems-and-controls PhD positions at Loughborough University in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
-driven shifts in species distributions. Currently, barnacles and other species are manually counted from over 3,000 images each year, which is time-consuming and prone to human error. This project will
-
fully understand how these interventions control water flow, meaning their flood protection benefits may be miscalculated. This PhD will generate new knowledge to support the effective design and
-
lacks good surface finishing quality. This project will investigate the science behind titanium chemistry and surface finishing for the control of porosity in engineered lattice components
-
of how a changing climate shapes planet Earth. Our hypotheses, which you will refine and test are: 1. Bedrock channel incision in Tenerife is locally controlled by the climatic regime. 2. River profiles
-
Deterioration of earthworks slopes (cuttings and embankments), which support transport infrastructure and act as flood defences, is accelerating under increasing weather extremes resulting from
-
integration technologies to create the next generation of smart textile and wearable systems for high performance sports (e.g., running) and rehabilitation applications (e.g., recovery monitoring
-
This PhD project focuses on advancing computer vision and edge-AI technology for real-time marine monitoring. In collaboration with CEFAS (the Centre for Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture
-
(CHF) phenomena – the prediction of which is key to safely designing and operating water based nuclear reactors. Current industrial modelling tools necessitate excessively conservative safety margins
-
Sand is the world’s most used resource after water and intensive extraction is reshaping major rivers and deltas. This PhD will quantify how sand mining alters globally relevant river channels
-
Wildfires and floods are two of the most destructive natural hazards, and climate change is intensifying both. When fires strip vegetation and alter soils, rainfall can trigger debris flows and