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4-year DPhil studentship [under the AHRC’s Collaborative Doctoral Partnerships (CDP) scheme ] Supervisors: Prof Manolis Chatzis (University of Oxford), Catherine Higgitt, Lynne Harrison and
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joining Southampton, she was a Postdoc at the Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford. Her research is about AI for healthcare, specifically focusing on medical image analysis, multi-modal
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DPhil Studentship in Experimental Soft Matter (Fluctuations in microfluidic and nanofluidic systems)
of Professor Alice Thorneywork in the Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory at the University of Oxford. Research in the Thorneywork group focuses on the development of experimental model systems built
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the development of new computational algorithms to both predict and analyze XPCI radiographs. The candidate will go on to apply these techniques to specific high-rate processes, such as the dynamic fragmentation
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will be based at the University of Oxford and will involve close collaboration with Outlook Energy including visits to their offices in Bristol. Outlook Energy is committed to supporting the research in
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Oxford-Emmy Graduate Scholarship Two full Oxford-Emmy Graduate Scholarships are available to applicants to full-time or part-time DPhil courses in Physics, Mathematics or Computer Sciences, within
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of Fusion Materials Supervisor: Prof Clive Siviour (University of Oxford), Dr Rory Spencer (UKAEA), Professor Fabrice Pierron (MatchID) A key challenge in materials qualification for fusion is the requirement
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(soton.ac.uk) . Select programme type (Research), 2024/25, Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, next page select “PhD Engineering & Environment (Full time)”. In Section 2 of the application form you
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of Nottingham and experimental development at the University of Oxford, using polycarbonate as a model material. The ultimate goal is to provide models to understand and simulate phenomena observed in polymers
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, mathematical, engineering or computing discipline to work on the development of instruments across our research teams. The Franklin PhD programme is fully funded for four years, where successful students will be