Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
- KINGS COLLEGE LONDON
- University of Oxford
- King's College London
- ;
- Heriot Watt University
- AALTO UNIVERSITY
- Durham University
- UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA
- University of London
- Heriot-Watt University;
- Imperial College London
- Lancaster University
- Swansea University
- The Royal Veterinary College, University of London;
- University of Cambridge
- 5 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
dynamic strain and flow fields during flight. Candidates should hold a PhD in a relevant biology or engineering discipline and be competent with numerical simulations. Desirable competencies would include
-
to answer pressing biological questions across development, cancer and immunology. We work shoulder-to-shoulder with biologists, clinicians, engineers and data scientists, providing an exceptionally
-
Job id: 115685. Salary: £44,355 - £47,882 per annum, including London Weighting Allowance). Posted: 21 May 2025. Closing date: 18 June 2025. Business unit: Natural, Mathematical & Engineering Sci
-
cell biology; cancer; cardiovascular; nutrition and diabetes; genetics; infection and immunology; imaging and biomedical engineering; transplantation immunology; pharmaceutical science; physiology and
-
diabetes; genetics; infection and immunology; imaging and biomedical engineering; transplantation immunology; pharmaceutical science; physiology and women's health. We also have thriving research programmes
-
Centre in the Denmark Hill Campus. The applicant should have a PhD in Biomedical Engineering, Medical Physics, Medical Imaging, or a related area (or pending results). They should have good analytical and
-
Aalto University is where science and art meet technology and business. We shape a sustainable future by making research breakthroughs in and across our disciplines, sparking the game changers
-
learning, at the intersection of reinforcement learning, deep learning and computer vision, in order to train effective robotic agents in simulation. You should hold a relevant PhD/DPhil (or near completion
-
cell biology; cancer; cardiovascular; nutrition and diabetes; genetics; infection and immunology; imaging and biomedical engineering; transplantation immunology; pharmaceutical science; physiology and
-
-mediated interactions can be engineered and manipulated for applications in quantum technologies and to simulate novel strongly interacting quantum systems. A suitable candidate would be a highly motivated