19 scholarship-vacancy-for-phd-in-computational-physics Fellowship positions at University of Adelaide in Australia
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
This PhD scholarship is funded by an Australian Research Council Industry Fellowship grant. It is a 3.5-year research training program. The ARC Industry Fellowship program aims to develop a strong
-
or supervise students Proven ability to develop course material with appropriate guidance from the program coordinator Experience in performing administrative functions primarily connected with the area of
-
Educational Technology in the School of Computer and Mathematical Sciences. The successful candidate will be a researcher in the use of technology to support cognitive and meta-cognitive skills of students
-
have a PhD in Computer Science (or be able to demonstrate equivalent research experience in modelling and simulation, software engineering research) and possess a deep and demonstrable knowledge
-
to develop their research expertise relevant to their particular field of research. This position is funded by the ASIC Defence Trailblazer Grant. To be successful you will need: A PhD in Mathematics, Computer
-
the financial sector. Regular progress reports and presentations to both AIML and CommBank stakeholders. To be successful you will need: A PhD in Mathematics, Computer Science, Engineering or other Machine
-
PhD in Computer Science, Engineering or other Machine Learning-related field. • Programming experience in python, C++ or other relevant language and experience in deep neural networks • Strong
-
an impactful career in quantum technology within a world-leading research institution. To be successful at Level A you will need: A PhD in Quantum Physics, good knowledge in the Physics of Quantum devices
-
or nearly completed PhD graduate with experience in protein biochemistry to join the Herbicide and Antimicrobial Innovation Laboratory led by ARC Future Fellow Dr Tatiana Soares da Costa. Working
-
holds Bachelors’ degrees in English literature (with Honours) (1961), and musicology (with Honours) (1970) from The University of Adelaide, and a PhD from the same university (1979). Her work includes the