144 parallel-computing-numerical-methods-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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for this post. The successful candidate will be required to develop a personal research programme in theoretical cosmology (which may include numerical modelling and/or data analysis), interacting with faculty
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We are seeking a well organised and self-motivated researcher to work on the Faraday Institution funded SOLBAT and/or LiSTAR projects, reporting to Prof. Mauro Pasta. Applicants must hold PhD/DPhil
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scientists, forming small teams focused on ambitious, ‘blue sky’ research for novel methods development relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor
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to join the group of Prof Ben Berks to study the bacterial Type 9 Secretion System. You will build on our recent work in this area (Nature (2018) 564: 77, Nat Microbiol (2021) 6: 221, Nat Microbiol (2024) 9
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atmospheric physics, meteorology, climate, numerical methods, and data science. The Research Associate will be proficient in programming/scripting (e.g., in Python, and/or R, and/or Matlab, and/or Bash script
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- Develop original numerical methods for facility simulation in presence of expansion waves - Demonstrate improved estimates of rate constants for two-temperature models - Contribute
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lab has developed the OrthoFinder comparative genomic methods. OrthoFinder has become widely-used in comparative genomics research, it powers many popular databases of online genomic information, and
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This is a re-advertisement of vacancy 180153. Previous applicants need not apply. A postdoctoral position is available in Prof. Ivan Ahel’s group based in the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology
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cancer research within a highly collaborative environment. The successful candidate will work with Prof. Sarah Blagden, Dr. James Chettle, and GSK collaborators, and will support the broader Go-Precise
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The post-holder will join a team of investigators working on the NERC-funded Large Grant ‘Ex-X’ Expecting the Unexpected. Understanding ‘dangerous’ volcanic transitions’, led by Prof. Jenni Barclay