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candidate with a background in social anthropology, design anthropology and/ or visual anthropology, and an interest in developing innovative new research in futures anthropology to win a scholarship within a
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can occur that are very different to the macroscopic world. Our group develops methods to measure and ‘see’ this atomic detail using some of the world’s most powerful electron microscopes. We apply
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large datasets and developing experimental techniques, including the use of artificial intelligence. There are also opportunities to be involved in the development and testing of new hardware for the next
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aims to obtain a comprehensive, integrated, multi-level understanding of mechanisms and features involved in the development and maintenance of eating disorders. This PhD scholarship is supported by
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. The project is nested with the Victoria Heart Hospital at Monash Clayton Campus and is focussed on developing and implementing electronic Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (ePROM) systems for heart failure
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the evolution of massive binary stars into compact binaries as sources of gravitational-waves and astrophysical inference on gravitational-wave observations. My research group on massive binary evolution -- also
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I work on the study of massive and supermassive stars (10-100,000 solar masses); the first generations of stars in the universe (Pop III stars); evolution of rotating massive stars and the spin
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My research focusses on understanding stars: their evolution and chemical composition, and how they move throughout our galaxy. Most of what we know about the universe comes from starlight, but
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is carried out within the LHCb collaboration that runs one of the four large experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN as well as towards future collider developments. I supervise a number of
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inform or design future experiments. As a researcher in my group, you would not only develop imaging theory and analysis tools to answer science questions about where the atoms are, what they are, and how