62 computer-science-image-processing-"Prof" PhD positions at University of Birmingham
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, they can utilise temporal and spatial diversity whilst simultaneously exploiting shared, intelligent adaptive signal processing whose combined performance and resilience can easily exceed that of the sum
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This project is an exciting opportunity to undertake industrially linked research delivered through the University of Birmingham in partnership with the Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC). It is
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to treat and prevent due to the ability of C. difficile to produce robust spores that can survive most cleaning regimens. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, rates of CDI have increased in the United Kingdom, but
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subset of serotypes. Consequently, through a process called ‘serotype replacement’ previously infrequent serotypes have expanded in prevalence to become those most observed. Consequently, even in countries
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A competition-funded PhD studentship is available in the School of Chemistry at the University of Birmingham to develop and apply nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging to advance
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k Si3N4 and then the additive manufacturing of the components with the aim of achieving complex geometries with the enhanced ceramic. Funding notes: This PhD programme will be hosted in the School
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for the prevention of IAI. The person taking on the project will need to work closely with the clinical teams and the patients and to do laboratory and computer-based work. A clinical qualification is not a
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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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terahertz (THz) radiation and the collective vibrational modes of biological macromolecules is an emerging field in physical chemistry. Terahertz radiation can be exploited to studying spectroscopic and
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the Nanophotonics group of Prof Angela Demetriadou (https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/profiles/physics/demetriadou-angela.aspx ), which is part of the Metamaterials and Nanophotonics group (https