Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Duration: 3.5 years (Admission in October 2025, January 2026, or April 2026) Supervisor: Professor Emilie Ringe Closing date: 1 August 2025 Stipend: EPSRC equivalent, £20,780 per annum The overall aims of this Leverhulme Trust-funded project are to valorise carbon dioxide and set the path...
-
required to meet their climate neutrality targets (see: https://up2030-he.eu/ ). The University of Cambridge is leading activities on data governance and city-wide carbon management. The post holder will be
-
and execution of AI projects centred on customer-centric strategies. The post holder will be located in West Cambridge Cambridgeshire, UK. The key responsibilities and duties include: Conduct advanced
-
. Those wishing to be considered should make an application to the doctoral programme at the Department of Social Anthropology to carry out research in the region of Inner Asia, since to be eligible
-
of the start date) Salary: Grade 5: £32,546 - £35,116 Grade 7*: £35,116 - £45,413 The funds for these posts are available until 6 months from commencement in post. This is a full-time position. Location
-
A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on Soft electronics. The post holder will be located in West Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, UK. The role
-
Trust. The successful candidate will work closely with the PI and a PhD student within a larger cross-disciplinary team to construct a quantitative computational model of carbonate biomineralisation
-
the Centre's goals and expertise. Please send your application by 20 June 2025 to: postgraduate.admin@aha.cam.ac.uk . Please include in your application: a personal statement (maximum 1,500 words) explaining
-
in Brain Injury (HRC) Fellowship Programme, which has been designed to support the research needs across its 5 themes: prevention & education, acute care & monitoring, restoration & rehabilitation
-
the cerebral cortex. fUS ultrasound waves are similar to CUS but using novel image reconstruction techniques and parallel computing technologies reaching 10,000 frames per second, enables very sensitive mapping