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for these positions be in January 2026 but earlier or later start dates can be negotiated. The successful candidate will be a member of Prof. Thompson’s research group within the Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology
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including Dr Keith Winwood (Manchester Met), and Prof Lukasz Kaczmarczyk (University of Glasgow, and founder of open-source finite element code MoFEM). Key Responsibilities The key technical responsibility
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of shut-offs – in European and US cities in relation to the changing political economy of the welfare state, social infrastructures, and public service provision. Under the direction of Prof Meehan as
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of shut-offs – in European and US cities in relation to the changing political economy of the welfare state, social infrastructures, and public service provision. Under the direction of Prof Meehan as
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for these positions be in January 2026 but earlier or later start dates can be negotiated. The successful candidate will be a member of Prof. Thompson’s research group within the Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology
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collaboration with Prof. Giovanna Tinetti and her team and collaborators at KCL. The main purpose of this role is to develop new and/or to use existing models to simulate the atmospheres of exoplanets and use
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. The Role Applications are invited for a postdoctoral research associate in the theory of soft and active matter, to work with Prof. Suzanne Fielding in the Department of Physics at Durham University on a
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with the University of Nottingham, Ohio State University, and Florida State University. The successful applicant will work primarily with the UK PI Prof Ian Jermyn (Durham) and Co-I Prof Karthik Bharath
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that requires accurate sub-grid models (e.g., Particle-in-Cell or Vlasov codes) coupled to a hydrodynamic simulation. In general, charged-particle transport is a non-trivial task, not only because of the large
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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. Jeremy Hutson (Chemistry