11 phd-software-engineering-"https:"-"https:" Fellowship research jobs at University of Leeds
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a research career in Science or Engineering at one of the UK’s leading research intensive universities? The EPSRC Postdoctoral Pathway scheme supports Fellowships of two years’ duration
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your machine learning expertise to cutting-edge automated optimisation challenges? We are seeking a Research Fellow in Digital Chemistry and Engineering to combine self-optimising flow reactor technology
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an existing open-source malaria transmission model (in partnership with the model developer) to embed these new water layers. Model outputs will then be validated using remotely-sensed datasets and existing
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Are you an ambitious researcher looking for your next challenge? Do you want to further your career in one of the UKs leading research-intensive Universities? You will have an experimental PhD
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the School of Mechanical Engineering. The project is part of a new £7M EPSRC funded Programme Grant that brings together a team of researchers from the universities of Leeds, Durham and Manchester
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pipelines and associated corrosion threats in dense phase CO2 streams with impurities. Working with regulators, standardisation and certification bodies, technology developers and industry, the models will be
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of viral infection to ultimately develop new effective antiviral agents. For this role, you should have a PhD (or close to completion) combining molecular virology and medicinal chemistry approaches, or a
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protocols, pilot work contributing to future grants and design and delivery of patient and public engagement activities. You must have a PhD (or close to completion) in epidemiology, biostatistics, health
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Australia (www.jcvi.org/research/circle). The successful applicant will join a growing community working at the interface of biotechnology, process systems engineering, circular economy innovation, and global
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of the project team (the PI, project administrator, two PhD researchers, and other research fellows) to compare across sites, scales and sectors; and to explore the broader implications of these sectoral and