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. This PhD project offers the opportunity to spearhead cutting-edge research into how drought affects the health and performance of UK levees. You will explore how environmental stressors compromise levee
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of high-resolution multibeam bathymetry and flow surveys, enabling detailed analysis of how riverbeds evolve under and after mining. These observations will be complemented by physical experiments in
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is increasingly fragile. The winter of 2024/25 brought high rainfall with good replenishment of rivers, aquifers and reservoir stocks but also causing flooding in some areas. Hydrological projections
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this programme. How To Apply You must apply through the University’s Apply to Newcastle Portal Once registered select ‘Create a Postgraduate Application’. Use ‘Course Search’ to identify your programme of study
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research into how drought affects the health and performance of UK levees. You will explore how environmental stressors compromise levee integrity and develop new ways to assess and monitor these impacts
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Deadline 25 Nov 2025 - 23:59 (UTC) Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Part-time Hours Per Week 40 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job
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developing neurotechnologies for treating brain disorders? In this PhD you will work with datasets of neuronal activity in animals and humans. You will apply computational approaches to describe spatial and
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containerised). Use CFD modelling and lab pilots to optimise hydraulics, mass transfer, and electrode configurations. Energy Integration Quantify full energy balances of MEC operation. Explore integration with
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is jointly funded by EPSRC and the Department for Transport. When transport infrastructure suffers damage or disruption from events such as natural hazards (flooding, high winds) or planned maintenance
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systems using vision-language-action (VLA ) models. These combine computer vision (to see), natural language understanding (to interpret instructions), and action generation (to respond), enabling robots