9 computer-programmer-"https:"-"Prof"-"https:"-"https:"-"CUBO" PhD positions at University of Birmingham
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
have partnered with AWE to fund a 4-year Computational Project to use state-of-the-art Computational Chemistry techniques to understand structure-property relationships in oxide scintillators. We will
-
resilient. The PhD student will undertake a full research programme: interviewing participants, leading focus groups, designing studies, analysing data, developing models, designing technological, educational
-
- or part-time research programme. This includes current doctoral researchers in the College of Arts and Law. The funding will be available from September 2026. One scholarship is available offering
-
Are you an outstanding and ambitious engineering or computer science graduate looking for the next challenge? Do you want to work at the frontier of artificial intelligence and robotics to enable
-
About the project Rising ultraviolet (UV) radiation levels present a growing challenge for both human health and the environment. While sunscreens play a critical role in preventing skin cancer, many current UV-filter ingredients raise concerns around safety and ecological impact. This PhD...
-
expertise computational model development. Candidates who have not yet acquired their PhD would be appointed at the Research Assistant level. What we can offer you: The opportunity to advance our
-
, characterization and the development of miniaturized devices. Experience with multivariate analysis, computational methods or statistical techniques is highly desirable. The PhD projects are highly interdisciplinary
-
There is growing UK and international interest in networked sensing and autonomous collaborative platforms, where multiple airborne sensors co-operate to collect and exploit data. In contrast to single-platform radar systems, distributed Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) architectures offer...
-
facility where power-plant relevant plasma fluxes and heat loads can be applied to PFC components. You will address this issue by building upon existing Birmingham-Julich research programmes and using