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pathways, whilst their omission can introduce significant systematic biases in parameter estimation, detection pipelines, and tests of fundamental physics. In this PhD project, you will develop a
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mechanisms, namely the remodelling of membrane lipids. Lipid remodelling is a process whereby bacteria selectively modify their membrane lipid composition in response to a particular environmental stimulus
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programme; please do not use any other link to apply to this project or your application may be rejected: https://sits.bham.ac.uk/urd/sits.urd/run/siw_ipp_lgn.login?process=siw_ipp_app&code1=FR167D&code2=0005
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. This link is unique to the MIBTP programme; please do not use any other link to apply to this project or your application may be rejected: https://sits.bham.ac.uk/urd/sits.urd/run/siw_ipp_lgn.login?process
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our ability to predictably control and exploit the drop for useful tasks. The proposed project has two aims: First, to develop computational models to quantitatively predict the response of chemically
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easier to detect and measured experimentally. However, it is not well known yet how this process emerges and how one can control it. This PhD project will focus on developing the necessary theoretical
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to fully entangle two or more molecules in plasmonic nanocavities. The PhD candidate should have completed (or about to complete) his/her undergraduate degree in Physics (preferably with first class honours
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editing), transcriptomics, laser scanning confocal microscopy, computational imaging approaches for analysis of images and movies, stimulating neuronal function with opto- and thermo-genetics in vivo, and
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interacting QFTs, where non-perturbative features become important. In this project, the student will apply techniques from mathematical physics, such as generalized symmetries and topologically invariant QFTs
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International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 395 (June-August 2023), has shown tipping point behaviour during the Pliocene in the deep-water return flow of the AMOC (Sinneseal et al. 2025). The aim