Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
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
-
Career Development Fellowships The University is committed to enabling all our colleagues to achieve their full potential. This Career Development Fellowship is a three-year fixed term position, 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
-
involving different decarbonisation technologies, as well as the development of AI-driven decision-making tools for optimising low-carbon marine powertrain designs. This position is part of the Horizon Europe
-
). The position is funded by NSF-EPSRC grant 'Stochastic Shape Processes and Inference', in collaboration with the University of Nottingham, Ohio State University, and Florida State University. The successful
-
, into accessible and practical resources, and will use these, alongside their scoping activities to support bid development activities across the Centre. The successful applicant will be expected to be proficient in
-
focus on developing and calibrating new protein sensors of cytosolic metal availability, which underpin the "metalation calculator ", and expand their applications to different microbes. The work
-
knowledge generated by staff across the GCCS, into accessible and practical resources, and will use these, alongside their scoping activities to support bid development activities across the Centre
-
: To classify integrable field theories, including those appearing in string theory. To uncover the universal algebraic structures of integrable models. To construct new integrable instances of gauge/gravity