131 computer-programmer-"https:"-"UCL" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Dr" "P" positions at University of Bristol
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, promoting reproducibility and enabling efficient collaboration across the partnership. You should apply if: You are an experienced programmer with research experience in computational mechanics and have a
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5pm GMT on 10-04-26. To make an online application go to http://www.bris.ac.uk/pg-howtoapply . Please select ‘Philosophy PhD’ on the programme choice page and ‘September 2026’ as your start date. Enter
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as possible to avoid disappointment. Lead the front-end development, setting standards for architecture, performance, accessibility, and developer experience. Design and implement modern, reusable
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. Please select Future Innovations in Non-Destructive Evaluation on the Programme Choice page. You will be prompted to enter details of the studentship in the Funding and Research Details sections
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The University of Bristol seeks to recruit a Research Associate or Senior Research Associate to support a New Investigator Award for Dr Matthew Hennessy. The holder of this role will carry out
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activities aligned with the School’s ambitions. Contribute to programme administration, including areas such as admissions, programme delivery, liaison with external examiners, and potentially leading
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The School of Physics seeks to recruit a Partnerships Manager for its EPSRC funded Quantum Information Science and Technology Centre for Doctoral Training programme (https://www.qist-cdt.info
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on the same basis, and we continue to foster an inclusive community. Research Build and sustain an internationally recognised programme of research in Human Computer Interaction with a strong emphasis on
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research groups at the University of Bristol working in ultrafast laser spectroscopy (led by Dr Tom Oliver and Dr Mike Price), aerosol science (led by Dr Bryan Bzdek and Prof Jonathan Reid) and computational
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biodiversity of coral reef ecosystems. Researchers have observed that marine animals living in symbiosis with photosynthetic algae, such as sea anemones, move in response to light (https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb