Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Career Development Fellowships The University is committed to enabling all our colleagues to achieve their full potential. Durham University's Career Development Fellowships are fixed term positions
-
Prof Jim McElwaine (Woods Hole, USA). The project involves developing and maintaining radar equipment designed to capture quantitative data on pyroclastic density currents during volcanic eruptions
-
academics who would benefit from a structured development programme and provision of both formal and 'on the job' training. The posts are also open to those who are returning to academia after a career in
-
to form ultracold CsYb molecules in optical lattices. The project is a collaboration with researchers in Paris and Warsaw. The post holder will work directly with Prof. Simon Cornish (Physics) and Prof
-
The Role Applications are invited for a postdoctoral research associate in the theory of soft and active matter, to work with Prof. Suzanne Fielding in the Department of Physics at Durham University
-
The Role Applications are invited for a postdoctoral research associate in the theory of soft and active matter, to work with Prof. Suzanne Fielding in the Department of Physics at Durham University
-
applicant will work primarily with the UK PI Prof Ian Jermyn (Durham) and Co-I Prof Karthik Bharath (Nottingham), but will also have the opportunity to collaborate with US PI Prof Sebastian Kurtek (Ohio) and
-
, supporting the development of innovative combustors, and driving innovative technology solutions. The role also involves contributing to research funding bids, supporting licensing or spin-out activities, and
-
to the advancement of the project, through the development of their own research ideas and interpretation of the project. The successful candidate will work with Prof Martin Roderick as the project lead. The post is
-
-translational modification (PTM), identified on haemoglobin in 1928. Carbon dioxide can directly combine with select protein groups to form carbamates. Influential research programmes from the 1920s-80s