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autophagy and the innate immunity response. Using cutting-edge omics (transcriptomics/proteomics), advanced imaging (confocal) and cellular biology approaches (macrophages, autophagy biomarkers), this project
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. Requirements: The candidate will have a 1st class undergraduate or Master’s degree (or equivalent) in Applied Mathematics, Physics, Aerospace Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, or a related
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ready for further downstream magnet recovery processes. Who we are looking for A first or upper-second-class degree in an appropriate discipline such as, robotics, mechatronics, computer science
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k Si3N4 and then the additive manufacturing of the components with the aim of achieving complex geometries with the enhanced ceramic. Funding notes: This PhD programme will be hosted in the School
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industrial-scale Positron Emission Particle Tracking, and cutting-edge Terahertz Raman spectroscopy. On the computational side, they will develop and apply a broad range of highly-transferrable digital tools
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the mechanisms by which genome rearrangements allow the bacterium to better infect the human host and persist in hospital settings. The project will be supervised by Professors David Grainger (UoB), Katie Hopkins
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of mostly water and molecules such as proteins, lipids and sugars that decay every day, so we eat and sleep to restore daily our cell biology. Synapses and changes in cell shape are made and unmade every day
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validation in representative environments. The successful candidate will gain expertise in electrochemical sensing, microengineering, and computational modelling, and will join an interdisciplinary research
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within these data sets and determine if such surveillance programs can provide genomic epidemiological data. This project will suit anyone with a microbiology or computer science background and full
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of mostly water and molecules such as proteins, lipids and sugars that decay every day, so we eat and sleep to restore daily our cell biology. Synapses and changes in cell shape are made and unmade every day