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About the Project Join the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Birmingham for groundbreaking PhD research that aims to improve the knowledge of biological macromolecules
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We invite applications for a fully funded joint PhD studentship between the University of Birmingham (UK) and BAM (Germany), starting in September/October 2025. The project will address critical
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. The studentship is also closely related to our School of Engineering. Supervisory team: Dr Gregor C. Leckebusch (University of Birmingham), Professor of Meteorology and Climatology (UK Met Office Joint Chair
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by the Ada Lovelace Centre and the University of Birmingham. This interdisciplinary project is ideal for candidates with a background in physics, materials science, chemistry, or computational science
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the wider PhD cohort in the group of meteorology and climate and the School of Geography, Earth, and Environmental Sciences. Supervisory team: Dr Gregor C. Leckebusch (University of Birmingham
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of Engineering at the University of Birmingham and delivered in collaboration with industrial partners and the Quantum Technology Hub in Sensing, Imaging and Timing (QuSIT) – one of five national hubs funded by
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the NIHR as part of EPR-HPRU between the University of Birmingham and UKHSA. In addition to the extensive training offered to all PhD students at UoB, the student will receive training and opportunities
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funded by NIHR as part of a Health Protection Unit in Public Health Genomics between the University of Birmingham and UKHSA. In addition to the extensive training offered to all PhD students at UoB
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used in wind turbine blades, structural engineering exposed to offshore environments. However, the rapid growth of the wind turbine industry is expected to generate million tons of blade waste globally
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synthetic groups at the University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Hasselt University, Chemnitz University of Technology, Princeton University and Georgia Tech. Who we are looking for: Motivated students