20 phd-in-computational-mechanics-"KHALIFA-UNIVERSITY" Postdoctoral positions at DURHAM UNIVERSITY in United Kingdom
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23 Aug 2025 Job Information Organisation/Company DURHAM UNIVERSITY Research Field Computer science Researcher Profile Recognised Researcher (R2) Established Researcher (R3) Country United Kingdom
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forefront of hydrogen technologies and their integration to the energy systems. The successful candidate will hold a PhD degree (or close to completion) in Mechanical/Electrical Engineering or related subject
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United Kingdom Application Deadline 17 Sep 2025 - 00:00 (UTC) Type of Contract Other Job Status Full-time Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job
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-temporally cooperate to result in an emergent macroscopic flow. Besides the immediate applications of the work to soft matter physics, and potentially also to the fracture mechanics of hard materials, yielding
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, Mechanical, Thermal Engineering or Computer Science. Experience Experience in conducting high quality academic research. Demonstrable ability to write material of a quality commensurate with publication in
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ideas/adaptation and development of research protocols. Person Specification Essential Criteria: Qualifications A good first degree in an Engineering related subject. A PhD (or be close to submission) in
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Arabidopsis. The research project, funded by BBSRC, will investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the initiation of epigenetic silencing in plant transposable elements. Towards this goal, the study will
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The Role This scheme offers up to 6 months follow-on funding to EPSRC-funded research students after they have submitted their PhD. The EPSRC Postdoctoral Pathway scheme (formerly known as Doctoral
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of the grant. A postdoctoral research assistant with a completed or submitted PhD in climate change law / policy will be recruited at 80% with remote working available. (It is intended that this will leave time
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. The research project is funded by the BBSRC for three years and is led by Dr Tim Davies. The research will explore the mechanism by which Wnt signalling can promote successful cytokinesis in the early C. elegans