Physics
Research Degrees MPhil/PhD
Taught Courses MSc in Biophotonics
Number of Postgraduate Students 84
Head of Department Professor Peter N Ratoff
Head of Research Professor V I Falko
Director of Postgraduate Studies Dr O Kolosov
Postgraduate Enquiries Mr Robin Lewsey tel: +44 (0)1524 594584 e-mail:
physics@lancaster.ac.uk
Website
www.lancs.ac.uk/depts/physics/
Location Physics Building
No 1 Physics Department in the UK (RAE 2008)
Physics is studied and taught in an active and vibrant research-led environment at Lancaster, with 34 permanent academic staff, 42 research staff, 19 academic visitors and 64 postgraduate students from a wide variety of countries.
Professor George Pickett
Professor of Physics and Fellow of the Royal Society
Professor Pickett is interested in the behaviour of materials at temperatures close to absolute zero. “Quantum Fluids” at these temperatures are very interesting materials since, among other things, they mimic the behaviour of the structure of space- time itself, allowing us to carry out cosmological experiments in the laboratory.
“The Department was the highest rated physics department in the 2008 RAE and also gained the top rating of 5* in RAE 2001. The Department provides excellent research facilities and opportunities in highly rated research groups spanning fields as diverse as cosmology, high energy physics, through nanoscience and microkelvin physics to non-linear dynamics and medical physics.”
“Postgraduate study at Lancaster will introduce you to the international nature of today’s physics research. We participate in several EU networks and collaborations with groups worldwide, including particle physics experiments at CERN (Geneva), Fermilab (US) and Kamioka/Tokai (Japan). In 2009 the Microkelvin Laboratory was designated a European Facility. The Department provides a broad range of stimulating opportunities for postgraduate research in both experimental and theoretical physics.”
The Department received the highest possible rating of 5* in the government’s 2001 Research Assessment Exercise, and scored the highest rating of all UK Physics Departments in the 2008 RAE. Making us the top Physics Department in the UK for research. The Department is rated 6th student satisfaction.
in the UK for
Research is concentrated on the experimental and theoretical aspects of and Cosmology, Condensed Matter Physics, New Materials and Nanoscience. It is supported by 50 current research grants totalling over £13 million, mostly from PPARC, EPSRC, the Royal Society and the EC. There are numerous funded collaborations with overseas laboratories, including those based at CERN and Fermilab, as well as major European networks and the Cockcroft Institute for Accelerator Science and Technology.
In recent years members of the Department have gained Fellowships of the Royal Society, STFC and EPSRC, a number of Leverhulme and Royal Society Fellowships, the Institute of Physics Rutherford Medal, the Simon Memorial Prize, the Charles Vernon Boys Medal and Prize, and the IUPAP Young Scientist Prize in Low Temperature Physics.
RESEARCH FACILITIES There is excellent support for physicists at Lancaster. Experimental research in elementary particle physics uses the accelerators at Fermilab (USA) and the new LHC being constructed at CERN (Geneva). Experiments are designed and apparatus is prepared in Lancaster. A major effort goes into data analysis, using high powered Linux workstations and a fully-dedicated 400-processor Grid computing facility in Lancaster.
There are extensive facilities of the Ultra-Low Temperature Laboratory (ULT) allowing experiments to be performed over the millikelvin and microkelvin range. The Departmental
Science and Technology 201
Profile
Physics
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