School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Edinburgh
Physics department of the University of Edinburgh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Physics department of the University of Edinburgh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The University of Edinburgh School of Physics and Astronomy is the physics department of the University of Edinburgh. The School was formed in 1993 by a merger of the Department of Physics and the Department of Astronomy, both at the University of Edinburgh. The Department of Physics itself was a merger between the Department of Natural Philosophy and the Department of Mathematical Physics in the late 1960s. The School is part of the University's College of Science and Engineering.[2][3]
Affiliation | EPCC, Institute of Physics |
---|---|
Head of Department | Professor Philip Best[1] |
Campus | James Clerk Maxwell Building, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, Scotland |
Website | www |
Institutions and research groups based within the school include:
The school is housed in the James Clerk Maxwell Building on the University's King's Buildings campus.
Catherine Heymans, the incumbent Astronomer Royal for Scotland, is a professor at the School of Physics and Astronomy, and is the course organiser for the pre-honours Introductory Astrophysics course.[5][6]
Five winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics are associated with the University: Charles Glover Barkla (X-ray), Edward Appleton (Ionospheric Physics, Radar), Max Born (Quantum Mechanics), Igor Tamm (Particle Physics, Cherenkov Radiation, Phonon, Tokamak) and Peter Higgs (Higgs Boson, Higgs Mechanism, Higgs Field).[7] Further notable physicists associated with the University include Thomas Young, Joseph Black, James Clerk Maxwell, David Brewster, Peter Guthrie Tait, Klaus Fuchs, C. G. Darwin, Nicholas Kemmer, David Olive, John Polkinghorne, Tom Kibble, Michael Cates, Fabiola Gianotti, Neil Turok.[8][9][10]
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