Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
As part of the School of Electrical, Electronic and Mechanical Engineering, we are excited to offer an opportunity for an academic conducting cutting-edge research in Quantum Technologies to join
-
is available for both UK and international students within the Quantum Device Modelling Group (http://warwick.ac.uk/nanolab ) at the University of Warwick. At the intersection of quantum physics and
-
to the goals of the national Quantum technology programme. Funding Notes This project is for self funded students or students who have secured external funding only. References https://ldsd.sites.sheffield.ac.uk
-
As part of the School of Electrical, Electronic and Mechanical Engineering, we are excited to offer an opportunity for an academic conducting cutting-edge research in Quantum Integrated Devices
-
emerging quantum technologies and foundational engineering principles. The successful candidate will join the Quantum Engineering Technology Labs (QET Labs ) research group, known for its industry-focused
-
Heriot-Watt University. About our Team The Quantum Photonics Laboratory (QPL) at Heriot‑Watt University undertakes research across solid‑state photonics and quantum technologies, engineering coherent
-
actively collaborating with colleagues and leveraging the state-of-the-art infrastructure at the Micronova Center for Micro-, Nano- and Quantum Technology. The position offers an opportunity to build a
-
, engineering coherent light–matter interactions in advanced quantum structures and devices. QPL (c. 20 members; 7 academic leads: Dr Mzyk, Prof Bonato, Dr Kurdi, Prof Gerardot, Dr Mazzera, Dr Brotons i Gisbert
-
for applications in photonics, electronics and emerging quantum technologies. It serves both academic and commercial users, providing reliable epitaxial materials that underpin advanced device research and
-
, machine learning, and quantum technologies. The researcher will gain expertise in AI for scientific discovery, while collaborating closely with physicists and engineers on real quantum hardware challenges