66 web-programmer-developer-university-of-liverpool PhD positions at Monash University in Australia
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the development of numerical methods for astorphysical fluid dynamics and radiation transport. Projects may employ a range of approaches from analytic modelling and numerical calculations on desktop
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My research interests focus on the stars - primarily their structure, evolution and nucleosynthesis. This can involve modelling of mixing in stars, or effects of changing nuclear burning rates
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expected to work with respect for Occupational Health and Safety guidelines, Ethics in Research and expectations of the highest levels of personal behaviour towards others at Monash University. Eligibility
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the evolution of massive binary stars into compact binaries as sources of gravitational-waves and astrophysical inference on gravitational-wave observations. My research group on massive binary evolution -- also
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for examining and imaging the magnetic fields from exotic conducting materials (e.g. superconductors, topological insulators), performing high bandwidth and high sensitivity vector magnetic sensing and developing
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is carried out within the LHCb collaboration that runs one of the four large experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN as well as towards future collider developments. I supervise a number of
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inform or design future experiments. As a researcher in my group, you would not only develop imaging theory and analysis tools to answer science questions about where the atoms are, what they are, and how
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gases" "Ultrafast dynamics of quantum matter" "Interactions between strongly coupled light-matter quasiparticles" "Atomically thin materials coupled to light" "Periodically driven many-body systems" web
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I work on the study of massive and supermassive stars (10-100,000 solar masses); the first generations of stars in the universe (Pop III stars); evolution of rotating massive stars and the spin
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My research focusses on understanding stars: their evolution and chemical composition, and how they move throughout our galaxy. Most of what we know about the universe comes from starlight, but