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Primary supervisor - Dr Myriam Charpentier Are you passionate about plant biology, endosymbiosis, system biology or bioengineering? Join a cutting-edge research project exploring how plants
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targeted must be extremely potent and are often natural products that, on their own, are too toxic to be used. In this project, we will use synthetic chemistry, both in solution and on solid phase, to design
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on such jets — although their detailed properties remain unexplored. In this project, we will develop new computational methods to compute and characterize these novel wave solutions, with particular emphasis
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that benefit fitness in the opposite sex. You will receive outstanding interdisciplinary training in computational biology, experimental genetics, and molecular biology. The supervisory team offers expertise
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across different imaging devices, including future sensors with unknown spectral sensitivities. Training The student will be based at the Colour & Imaging Lab at the School of Computing Sciences which has
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-Markovianity. For sufficiently Markovian systems, the photon-photon correlations can be computed using the quantum regression theorem together with a Lindblad equation for atomic ensembles or a HEOM model of a
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in RNA biology, biochemistry, and Oxford Nanopore sequencing. The Norwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Programme (NRPDTP) is offering fully funded studentships for October 2025 entry
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. genetics, molecular biology, evolutionary biology) or a quantitative science (e.g. computer science, statistics, physics), and have strong interests in genomics, data analysis and evolution. The Norwich
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their host plant. Use cutting-edge molecular biology and genomics, we will try to solve a decades-old mystery in plant pathology. Many plant disease-causing fungi lose their ability to cause disease
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training in: Biocatalysis and enzyme screening. Natural product derivatization and purification. Analytical chemistry (NMR, LC-MS, HPLC) Mammalian cell-based pharmacology. Multidisciplinary collaboration