professor profile picture

T. Liverpool

Professor at School of Physics

University of Bristol

Country flag

United Kingdom

This profile is automatically generated from trusted academic sources.

Google Scholar

.

ORCID

.

LinkedIn

Social connections

How do Bangladeshi students reach out?

Sign in for free to see their profile details and contact information.

Meet Kite AI

Contact this professor

LinkedIn
ORCID
Google Scholar

Research Interests

Gpu Computing

10%

Mathematics

10%

Microfluidic

10%

Phase Separation

10%

Physics

10%

Ask ApplyKite AI

Start chatting
How can you help me contact this professor?
What are this professor's research interests?
How should I write an email to this professor?

Positions1

Publisher
source

Nigel Wilding

University Name
.

University of Bristol

PhD in Critical Behaviour in Active Matter

This PhD project at the University of Bristol's School of Physics focuses on the critical behaviour in active matter, specifically investigating whether the critical point of motility-induced phase separation (MIPS) aligns with known equilibrium universality classes or represents a new form of non-equilibrium criticality. The research will employ large-scale GPU simulations of active Brownian, run-and-tumble, and lattice-gas models, combined with finite-size scaling analyses such as Binder-cumulant crossings, compressibility peaks, and correlation-length estimates from structure factors. These methods will be used to map phase boundaries and extract critical exponents, leveraging the university's ISAMBARD 3 supercomputer and BlueCrystal Phase 5 HPC cluster for high-performance computation. The project aims to resolve the universality of MIPS, a fundamental and timely question in statistical and non-equilibrium physics, with potential applications in designing and controlling active materials, soft robotics, and microfluidic platforms. The research group is led by Prof. Nigel Wilding, with additional expertise from Prof. Francesco Turci, Dr. Simon Hanna, and Prof. T. Liverpool. The successful candidate will join a vibrant graduate research community, benefit from comprehensive induction and skills training, and have access to a supportive environment for career development. Funding covers full tuition and a stipend for home students, with a limited number of fully-funded places for outstanding international candidates. Applicants should have a strong background in physics or a related field, and meet the university's English language requirements. The application deadline is 19 January 2026. For further information, contact Prof. Nigel Wilding or the Bristol Physics Graduate School.

1 month ago