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Research Fellow Job No.: 676293 Location: Clayton campus Employment Type: Full-time Duration: 12 month fixed term appointment Remuneration: $80,464 - $109,203 pa Level A (plus 17% employer superannuation) Amplify your impact at a world top 50 University Join our inclusive, collaborative...
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Synchrotron and the Super Photon Ring (SPring-8) Synchrotron in Japan, where our students also regularly conduct their own experiments. Project areas include: Colour (spectroscopic) X-ray imaging in multiple
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these methods to understand the atomic structure and properties of a range of materials being developed for efficient solar cells, light generation, batteries, superconductors, photonics and nanoelectronics. We
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advanced optical materials and nanotechnology to unleash the full potential of structured light in optical and quantum information processing. Our developed photonic devices and systems have significant
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delivery applications. We are growing the group to comprise around six postdoctoral staff and six PhD students, forming a highly supportive and talented daily workplace. We regularly utilize large scale
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of Chemistry at Monash University is seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Research Fellow to advance encapsulation technologies through emulsion and microemulsion formation. This role offers the opportunity
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people who discover them The Opportunity Postdoctoral Research Fellow to work as part of a team, alongside senior researchers, clinicians, policy makers and other CMUS research staff. This position reports
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I supervise a wide range of projects at the intersection of photonics and nanotechnology, investigating how we can efficiently control light on the nanoscale. Applications are in areas such as
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black hole birth properties" (with Prof Mandel) "Multi-Messenger Signals (Photons, Neutrinos, Gravitational Waves) from Supernovae" web page For further details or alternative project arrangements, please
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for a future e+e- collider. Measure branching fractions of baryonic multi-strange decays. Photon detector characterisation for a future Time of Flight detector at CERN. web page To discuss a possible