25 phd-computer-engineering-"Diamond-Light-Source"-"Diamond-Light-Source" Postdoctoral positions at Durham University
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Engineering, Science and Theory (NESTiD) Scientific Computing (SciComp) Vision, Imaging and Visualisation (VIViD) We are ranked 4th in the UK in the Complete University Guide 2024. For more information, please visit our
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research project based in the groups of Prof. Aurora J. Cruz-Cabeza and Prof. John Evans. The project is part of a new £7m EPSRC funded Programme Grant that brings together a team of researchers from
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: Qualifications A good first degree in Chemistry, Physics, Chemical Engineering or Natural Sciences A PhD (or be close to submission) in Solid State Chemistry or a related subject. Experience Experience in
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thresholds which are applicable to some visas. Person Specification Essential Criteria: Qualifications A good first degree in Engineering related subject. A PhD (or be close to submission) in Engineering
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through high-quality publications. Desirable Criteria: 13. A PhD (or be close to submission) in Electrical Engineering, Energy Systems, Control Engineering, Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, or a
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Specification Essential Criteria: Qualifications A good first degree in Finance/FinTech, Computer Science or closely related discipline. A PhD in Blockchain, FinTech, AI applications or a related subject central
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are an active and vibrant department, with a strong cohort of early career academics and future leaders. As a PDRA in computational chemistry at Durham, you will have access to state-of-the-art instrumentation
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the field of atomic. molecular and optical physics within the Durham Quantum Light and Matter group. The positions are associated with a new five-year Programme Grant on "Quantum Many-Body Physics with
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sport and gym facilities and access to a 24-7 Employee Assistance Programme. • Our on-site nursery is rated Outstanding by Ofsted, and you can access holiday camps for children aged 5-16. • Our
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. Lanthanide complexes can be engineered to emit CPL, which encodes chiral molecular fingerprints in luminescence spectra that cannot be decoded by conventional optical measurements. However, chiral CPL signals