26 parallel-computing-numerical-methods Postdoctoral positions at Durham University in United Kingdom
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Computer Science ( Job Number: 25001131) Department of Computer Science Grade 7: - £38,784 - £41,064 per annum Fixed Term - Full Time Contract Duration: 36 months
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Postdoctoral Research Associate to join a research project based in the groups of Prof. Aurora J. Cruz-Cabeza and Prof. John Evans. The project is part of a new £7m EPSRC funded Programme Grant that brings
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. The Role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate position in the Department of Engineering, with a focus on undertaking both experimental and numerical studies within the hydrogen
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methods of deterministic antiferromagnetic domain control through the application of external fields that modify the underlying crystal symmetries. The postholders will be expected to display initiative and
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the field of atomic. molecular and optical physics within the Durham Quantum Light and Matter group. The positions are associated with a new five-year Programme Grant on "Quantum Many-Body Physics with
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diversity of methods and data available to the discipline. We are further developing our core undergraduate programmes and will be recruiting world leading staff accordingly to ensure these programmes
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are an active and vibrant department, with a strong cohort of early career academics and future leaders. As a PDRA in computational chemistry at Durham, you will have access to state-of-the-art instrumentation
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academic partners. The Role The postholder will contribute to the UKRI-funded Great British Chemicals (GBC) Hub, a seven-year national programme bringing together 10 UK universities, industry partners, and
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research project based in the groups of Prof. Aurora J. Cruz-Cabeza and Prof. John Evans. The project is part of a new £7m EPSRC funded Programme Grant that brings together a team of researchers from
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undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in Sociology, Criminology and Social Work. Further, we support the delivery of a faculty research methods programme as part of the collaborative NINEDTP and contribute