Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Alan Andrew Watson, FRS, (born 26 September 1938 in Edinburgh) is a physicist and an emeritus professor at the University of Leeds, England.
Examples are the BPhil (Bachelor of Philosophy), MPhil (Master of Philosophy) and PhD or DPhil (Doctor of Philosophy). Most recipients of such degrees have not engaged in a specialised study of academic philosophy - the degree is available for almost the whole range of disciplines.
This is a list of notable alumni related to the University of Birmingham and its predecessors, Mason Science College and Queen's College, Birmingham. Excluded from this list are those people whose only connection with Birmingham University is that they were awarded an honorary degree .
Between 2008 and 2010 she served as Head of the School of Physics and Astronomy. She has served as the Chairman of the British Liquid Crystal Society. It was announced that Glesson would move to the University of Leeds as Head of School and Cavendish Chair of Physics in late 2014.
William Astbury, physicist and molecular biologist who made pioneering X-ray diffraction studies of biological molecules (Lecturer/Reader in Textile Physics, 1928-1946, Professor of Biomolecular Physics, 1946–61)
Kenneth Stewart Carslaw FRS is Professor of Atmospheric Science at the University of Leeds. Education. Carslaw was educated at the University of Birmingham (BSc, 1989) and the University of East Anglia (MSc, 1991; PhD, 1994). Career and research
Sarah Anne Harris is a British physicist who is an Associate Professor of Biological Physics at the University of Leeds. Her research investigates biomolecular simulations and the topology of DNA. In particular, she makes use of molecular dynamics to explore how DNA responds to stress.
Piers Forster is a Professor of Physical Climate Change and Director of the Priestley International Centre for Climate at the University of Leeds. A physicist by training, his research focuses on quantifying the different human causes of climate change and the way the Earth responds.
He graduated in physics from the University of Leeds in 1992 with a B.Sc. and in 1996 with a Ph.D. His Ph.D. thesis Instrumentation development and experimental design for a next generation detector of the highest energy cosmic rays was supervised by Alan Andrew Watson.
Gordon D Love (born 1967) is a British physicist. Love is a Professor of Computer Science and Physics at the University of Leeds and is the Head of the University of Leeds School of Computing [1].