30 postdoc-in-distributed-systems-and-controls PhD positions at University of Birmingham
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to single-platform radar systems, distributed Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) architectures offer increased flexibility and resilience, more rapid environmental mapping, improved spatial coverage and enhanced
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testing, flight dynamics and control. How to apply: The application will be made through the university’s online application system (https://sits.bham.ac.uk/lpages/EPS024.htm). Please provide a cover letter
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geometrical structures. Furthermore, the radiation characteristics can be difficult to control and this is sometimes only feasible with expensive array and device technologies. This PhD will look at
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. The project will adopt a systems perspective to examine interoperability across preparedness, response and recovery phases. It will explore how policies, command structures, data sharing arrangements and
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records that can systematically inform preparedness, training and future response. As a result, learning from past events is fragmented, inconsistently captured, and insufficiently embedded into emergency
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Location: South Kensington campus About the role: Applications are invited for a fully funded fixed-term position at the Research Assistant/Associate (PostDoc) level in simulating the atmospheric
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the oscillation and decay of waves in systems where energy can escape to infinity, replacing eigenvalues and eigenfunction expansions in non-compact domains. The consideration of analytic or Gevrey regularity in
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highly likely that the base cell will be silicon given its maturity and manufacturing dominance. Potential top-cells include thin-film solar absorbers with a perovskite structure. To produce a tandem solar
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There is an industrial need to move away from crude oil as a precursor of a wide range of products such as plastics, fuels, and pharmaceuticals. One way to achieve this is using bacteria
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The global transition to a low-carbon economy demands innovative approaches to managing CO₂ emissions. This PhD project addresses one of the most pressing challenges in sustainable chemistry: the