Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
" "Searching for physics beyond general relativity with gravitational-waves" (with Prof Paul Lasky) "Improving the sensitivity of gravitational-wave detectors" (with Prof Paul Lasky) "Detecting dark matter with
-
thermonuclearbursts" (with Prof Alexander Heger) "Weak Helium Flashes in Accreting Neutron Stars" (with Prof Alexander Heger) "Tidal disruption – stars being eaten by black holes"(with Prof Daniel Price) web page
-
" (with Prof Kris Helmerson) "High-bandwidth continuous magnetic sensing of an ensemble of electric spins" (with Prof Kris Helmerson) "Developing a spatially sensitive optical magnetometer catheter probe
-
Regular Job Code 9742R5 Employee Class Acad Prof and Admin Add to My Favorite Jobs Email this Job About the Job Required Qualifications: * Ph.D. or Masters with equivalent experience in Computational
-
analytical imaging methods, then working with collaborators to apply these methods to biomedical research, diagnostic imaging and beyond. Research projects vary from purely theoretical, to computational
-
possess translational symmetry, the role of structure and symmetry in glasses is not established. This research programme involves the development of new x-ray and electron diffraction-based methods
-
machine learning are encouraged to apply. If you wish to discuss any details of the project informally, please contact Prof Suan Hui Pu, Smart Manufacturing and Systems Research Group, Email: suanhui.pu
-
between theoretical and computational high-energy physics. The research contributes to the world-leading PYTHIA Monte Carlo Event Generator, which serves as the baseline for the majority of experimental
-
cooperation with Kopter Germany GmbH and the Engineering Risk Analysis Group of Prof. Straub, which provides information on both the health and the actual stress of helicopter components. For this so-called
-
" with A/Prof Amanda Karakas "Proton ingestion and neutron capture" with Dr Simon Campbell "Tackling the Lithium mysteries with telescope data and stellar models" with Dr Simon Campbell web page