Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Postdoctoral Research Associate in Radar Imaging of Geophysical Flows ( Job Number: 25000801) Department of Earth Sciences Grade 7: - £38,249 - £45,413 per annum Fixed Term - Annualised Hours (Full
-
Award. The Role We are seeking a highly motivated researcher - either a Grade 7 PhD holder, or a Grade 6 graduate - to join the IMPACTS project, funded by the Northern Net Zero Accelerator. The project
-
pioneering solid-state CPL spectrometer (Nat. Commun., 2020, 11, 1676) triggered a paradigm shift in CPL spectroscopy that has been hindered over the last 50 years due to its stagnant design that prevented its
-
gases, including the operation of magneto-optical traps, the production of quantum degenerate gases and optical trapping using optical tweezers/lattices. They will be expected to display initiative and
-
. The University has been awarded the Disability Confident Leader status. If you are a candidate with a disability, we are committed to ensuring fair treatment throughout the recruitment process. We will make
-
provided with the same opportunities. This applies to our everyday work in teaching, research and administration, including academic progression and promotion processes. Our Law School holds an Athena Swan
-
gases, including the operation of magneto-optical traps, the production of quantum degenerate gases and optical trapping using optical tweezers/lattices. They will be expected to display initiative and
-
decision-making. The group is actively involved in multiple research areas, including: · Frontier beam and MIMO technologies for swarm control and ISAC in 6G communications and edge computing
-
of the line manager. To design and develop novel and cutting-edge machine learning, computer vision and image processing frameworks for tasks such as object detection, segmentation, pose estimation, scene
-
Associate in the field of Quantitative Sedimentology and Geophysics of Seafloor Processes. The successful applicant will be part of two major NERC funded projects to make the first detailed measurements