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. aqueous durability vs. stoichiometry). For this project, you will be based at the University of Manchester within the Nuclear Fuels and Radioactive Waste and Environment research groups. You will have
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environment. Students will benefit from: dedicated cohort training and skills development networking and collaboration opportunities access to cutting edge facilities within the Henry Royce Institute, the UK’s
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. The project will involve developing tools and techniques from AI and mathematics/statistics to identify changes in various climatic variables and their impact on biological, environmental and socioeconomic
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Engineering and co-supervised with Dr. J. Javier Burgos-Mármol at Unilever, benefiting from a dynamic academic environment and strong industry collaboration. This interdisciplinary PhD is ideal for candidates
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@manchester.ac.uk ) and Prof. Christopher Hardacre (c.hardacre@manchester.ac.uk ) at the University of Manchester, benefiting from a dynamic academic environment and strong industry collaboration
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to applicants with backgrounds in atmospheric or environmental science, chemistry, physics, environmental engineering or related fields and to those who have an interest in experimental science and environmental
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powerful framework for linking blood flow dynamics with cardiovascular disease, using in silico approaches to systematically study flow environments associated with vascular health and pathology
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addition to the access to state-of-the-art facilities, the student also has the opportunity to develop interdisciplinary skills and to work in a team environment involving leading academics and industrial experts
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missions such as search-and-rescue or large-scale surveillance—where environments are unknown, dynamic, and unstructured—robotic swarms must adapt, select appropriate actions, and respond to changing
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environments associated with vascular health and pathology. Atherosclerotic plaque formation in arteries is strongly influenced by local blood flow patterns. Disturbed haemodynamics are associated with plaque