50 engineering-computation "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Simons Foundation" positions at University of Exeter
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the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises: An stipend for 3.5 years (currently £20,780 p.a. for 2026/27) in line with UK Research
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to train tomorrow’s leaders in earth and environmental science. For further details about the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises
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to train tomorrow’s leaders in earth and environmental science. For further details about the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises
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to train tomorrow’s leaders in earth and environmental science. For further details about the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises
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to train tomorrow’s leaders in earth and environmental science. For further details about the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises
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to train tomorrow’s leaders in earth and environmental science. For further details about the programme please see http://nercgw4plus.ac.uk/ For eligible successful applicants, the studentships comprises
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an interest in computer science and/or computational approaches to engineering applied to this important maritime topic and will be willing to travel to partners within the UK (e.g. Newcastle and Bath
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behaviour in a practical, real-time monitoring system requires advances in both sensor engineering and behavioural data interpretation. This PhD project aims to develop a next generation environmental
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networking, computing and sensing. Quantum technologies exploit the unique properties of quantum physics to deliver functionality that cannot be achieved using classical physics alone. A key challenge is the
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are fundamentally limited by a "one model for one task" design philosophy. This approach incurs prohibitive engineering costs and yields brittle solutions with poor generalisation to new network conditions, trapping