Research | Scholarship for Nigerians and Africans - Part 126

PhD Position in Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry, University of Southern Denmark

We wish to fill one PhD mobility fellowships at the Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, with the following description:
Activity study of microorganisms in marine environments using molecular ecology tools in combination with biogeochemical analysis.
Research will be on microorganisms living in marine water and sediments and it includes several field trips to marine environments around the world. We focus on microorganisms within the sulphur and methane cycle and combine microbial activity and molecular ecology with biogeochemistry and stable isotope analysis. The successful applicant should have interest in one or several of these areas and like to do both laboratory and field studies.
As this is a mobility fellowship, the student’s present degree must have been awarded from a university other than the University of Southern Denmark.

Contact Person: Kirsten Habicht,
Email: khabicht@biology.sdu.dk.

Contact Address:
Kirsten Habicht,
Department of Biology,
University of Southern Denmark,
Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M
Denmark

Closing date: 10 September, 2010 at 12 noon.

PhD Post in Musicology, University of Oslo, Norway

The position is available for a period of three years from January 2011.

The PhD fellowship is connected to the project Popular Music and Gender in a Transcultural context. The project is jointly funded by the Norwegian Research Council under the programme FRIHUM, and the University of Oslo, which will run from July 2010 through June 2014.

For more information please se the Department’s home page.

The main aim of this project is to consider the cultural construction of gender through popular music. The relevance of this project is to develop new theoretical insights into gendered performance, which will involve research within both a Norwegian and international context. While cultural and historical approaches will inform this project, the prime direction will be a reflective consideration of identity politics through critical musicology. Music’s visual representation is also of importance in this project, and audiovisual performativity constitutes a principal site for research attached to this post.

An important outcome of this project will be both the publication and mediation of research work in the field of popular music, with a specific emphasis on new perspectives within gender studies.

Requirements for applicants :

  • Applicants must hold a Master’s degree in Musicology.

Qualifications and personal skills:

  • We are interested in projects of high quality of an innovative nature, which demonstrates an excellent grasp of the theoretical and methodological approaches within the field of popular musicology.
  • In assessing the applications, special emphasis will be placed on the quality of the project proposal as much as an assessment of the candidate’s ability to complete the dissertation within the given time frame. Candidates short-listed for this post will be called for an interview.

Please also refer to the rules for appointments to recruitment posts:

Submissions:

Applicants must submit the following attachments with the electronic application:

  • letter of application
  • Curriculum Vitae including grades
  • a possible list of published and unpublished works
  • project description, including a detailed progress plan for the project (maximum 5 pages, see Guidelines for project descriptions)

Educational certificates, master theses and the like are not to be submitted with the application, but applicants may be asked to submit such information or works later.

See also Guidelines for appointments to research fellowships at the Faculty of Humanities.

Application Deadline: August 31, 2010

PhD Studentship, Neutron Reflectometry and Ellipsometry applied to ATmospheric Night-time Oxidation (NEATNOx), University of Reading, UK

This project aims to obtain new insights into characteristics of film-covered cloud droplets by combining neutron reflector and ellipsometry for the study of atmospheric
reactions. Concerted experiments with these two complementary techniques will allow
investigation of the kinetic behaviour of organic monolayers at the air–liquid interface.
Organic monolayers on a Langmuir trough act as model for naturally occurring organic
layers on cloud droplets, and gas-phase destruction of the monolayers is monitored in real
time. Central to the project objectives is the optimization of the ILL’s new horizontal
neutron reflectometer, FIGARO, to push its temporal resolution to new limits. The
development of a dedicated cell for ellipsometry measurements will allow essential characterization of the chemical systems.

The work forms part of a wider research programme into modern climate change. Reactions
of model surfactants with the atmospheric night-time oxidant NO3 as well as with the
nitrogen oxides NO2 and N2O5 will be investigated. Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids as
well as surfactants with various degrees of deuteration will be studied to gain insight into
the reaction mechanisms at sub-molecular resolution. The experimental data obtained will
be fed into newly developed models to (i) directly quantify the importance of surface
reactions on atmospheric aerosol; (ii) de-convolute the relative importance of surface
reaction, bulk reaction and transport; (iii) provide mechanistic insight with sub-molecular
resolution; and (iv) gain key information on the surfactant properties of reaction products.

The student will be based at ILL in Grenoble for the duration of the PhD and will have visits
to the University of Reading where the degree will be awarded. This position represents an
excellent opportunity for the student to be involved in additional collaborations and
participate in international meetings as well as cross-disciplinary research projects.
The annual allowance is currently €28,800 (subject to social security contributions and
income tax) plus the ILL productivity bonus (€910 in 2009), tuition fees are not payable. A
stipend will be paid at a similar level for 3 years from commencement of study, subject to
transfer to PhD after the first year.

The studentship starting date should be between October 2010 and February 2011. The
studentship is open to UK and EU nationals. Non-EU nationals are welcome to apply if the
have funding for the difference between EU and international fees.

Closing date for applications: 10th September 2010.