74 software-formal-method-phd PhD positions at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
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also have to develop the theoretical methods to describe the up-conversion mechanism, and design new types of cavities that enhance its efficiency. The PhD candidate should have completed (or about to
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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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early risk identification. This PhD project aims to design and develop personalised 3D-printed insoles with enhanced offloading performance and integrated sensing capability. The work will explore novel
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of Sentinel-2 fluvial scenes’. Earth Surf. Process. Landforms, 45, 3120–3140. Carbonneau et al 2020) ‘Adopting deep learning methods for airborne RGB fluvial scene classification’. Remote Sensing of Environment
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Woodburning has emerged as the single most important source of primary fine particulate matter (PM2.5) in Birmingham and likely many other UK cities. Exposure to PM2.5 from wood stoves contributes to hundreds of premature deaths each year in Birmingham and imposes a significant burden on public...
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(TQFTs), to study non-perturbative aspects of QFT. Projects are available in the study of formal aspects of generalized symmetries, semiclassical study of monopoles, and the applications of generalized
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Fossil tracks and trackways (a type of trace fossil or ichnofossil) provide highly complementary information to the body fossil record. Tracks are more abundant than body fossils as organisms have one skeleton, but may leave many of tracks in their lifetime, often occur in stratigraphic levels...
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pathways, whilst their omission can introduce significant systematic biases in parameter estimation, detection pipelines, and tests of fundamental physics. In this PhD project, you will develop a
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We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship (3.5 years) hosted by the University of Birmingham and conducted in collaboration with Siemens and the UK Met Office. This project is ideal
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The construction industry accounts for 8–10% of global anthropogenic CO₂ emissions and faces significant challenges in achieving NetZero targets by 2050. This PhD project offers an exciting