50 computer-science-programming-languages-"St"-"ST"-"FEMTO-ST" PhD positions at University of East Anglia in United Kingdom
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Requirements: At least UK equivalence Bachelors (Honours) 2:1. English Language requirement (Faculty of Science equivalent: IELTS 6.5 overall, 6 in each category). Acceptable first degree: environmental sciences
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metagenomic datasets. This project provides an exciting opportunity to discover new bioactive molecules and develop skills across informatics, biology and chemistry. Applications are welcomed from students who
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: environmental monitoring, AI, computer vision or multispectral imaging. Entry Requirements At least UK equivalence Bachelors (Honours) 2:1. English Language requirement (Faculty of Science equivalent: IELTS 6.5
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decisions about personalised phage therapy. The expected workload is mainly computational, using bioinformatics analyses to investigate the microbiome and phageome with supporting laboratory work for DNA
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NERC. Person Specification We seek an enthusiastic individual with a degree in geoscience, physical sciences, or computer science. Numerical literacy and experience with coding tools (Matlab or Python
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at the John Innes Centre, providing opportunities to develop extensive skills in a breadth of areas, including field surveys, plant pathology, molecular biology, and computational biology. Additionally, you
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confined battery geometries. Advanced modelling—including computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and transient thermal analysis—is required to accurately capture heat flux distributions, temperature uniformity
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, and edge computing, AASs are evolving into smart, interconnected solutions for addressing the dynamic challenges of modern cities. This project investigates how to coordinate these multifunctional
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capabilities to match the real outcome as closely as possible. Entry Requirements Acceptable first degree - Computer Science, Engineering, Physics or Mathematics. The standard minimum entry requirement is 2:1
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targeted must be extremely potent and are often natural products that, on their own, are too toxic to be used. In this project, we will use synthetic chemistry, both in solution and on solid phase, to design