Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. The research project is led by Professor Alistair McGregor and will investigate the genetic and developmental changes underlying differences in organ size among Drosophila species. The successful applicant will
-
Durham or elsewhere for their PhD, but should identify a project at Durham that constitutes a new and discrete body of work that progresses and exploits the outcomes of their doctoral work or enables
-
Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate. This is to support research on a Leverhulme Research Project awarded to Dr Kim Bouwer, with the title: A study of everyday climate
-
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
-
. The research project is funded by the BBSRC for three years and is led by Dr Tim Davies. The research will explore the mechanism by which Wnt signalling can promote successful cytokinesis in the early C. elegans
-
print-like emission profiles and long luminescent lifetimes. The proposed project will harness the phenomenon of Circularly Polarised Luminescence (CPL), where different enantiomers of the same chemical
-
Prof Jim McElwaine (Woods Hole, USA). The project involves developing and maintaining radar equipment designed to capture quantitative data on pyroclastic density currents during volcanic eruptions
-
The Role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Mathematics with a particular emphasis on the p- adic Langlands programme and related areas. The research project , led by
-
The Role Applications are invited for the position of FCJ Postdoctoral Research Associate in the History of Catholicism. The research project will investigate the history of the Faithful Companions
-
on a project funded by the ERC Advanced Grant 'RheoYield'. The position is to commence in September 2025 or as soon as possible thereafter. Its overall aims will be to understand the deformation and flow