Project Tag: iop
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Nanoparticle nose
Naneum made portable instruments to detect and analyse nanoparticles, with applications in climate research, workplace air-quality assessment, and health studies.
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Silent micropump for medicine
TTP designed a small, noise-free air pump for patients to use in their daily lives, earning an Innovation Award from the Institute of Physics. The technology benefits from a deep understanding of physics and is manufactured in the UK.
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Self-updating LCD shelf labels
ZBD Solutions developed low-power, wireless networked e-paper displays for retail, winning an Innovation Award from the Institute of Physics.
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Real-time 3D microscopy
Aurox simplifies 3D imaging for lab microscopes through basic physics. Their affordable, instrument provides high-quality 3D imaging for individual researchers.
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A great team in engineering
From humble beginnings as mechanical apprentices in Ireland and Wales, Sir David McMurtry and John Deer founded Renishaw, a company that has become one of the world’s foremost manufacturers of precision measurement equipment.
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Fusion
Professor Steven Cowley was the winner of the 2012 Glazebrook Medal awarded by the Institute of Physics for his leadership of the UK’s fusion energy programme and his major contributions to plasma and fusion science.
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Butterflies and metamaterials
Roy Sambles studies butterfly wings to create “metamaterials” that manipulate light and microwaves. His work has practical applications, such as improving RFID tagging.
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Gluon
Graham Ross paved the way for discovering the gluon, the force carrier for the strong nuclear force. His work reshaped particle physics and led to new insights into the origins and nature of the universe.
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Rolls-Royce university technology centres
The Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre (UTC) network is widely held to be an exemplary model for interaction between universities and industry. Professor Richard Parker, Dr Mike Howse and Professor Philip Ruffles from Rolls-Royce plc were awarded the 2011 Glazebrook Medal by the Institute of Physics for the creation, development and expansion of the UTC network.
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My daily commute to absolute zero
Graham Batey, a physicist at Oxford Instruments NanoScience, has developed refrigerators that can reach temperatures just a few thousandths of a degree above absolute zero without using liquid gases like nitrogen and helium.
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A genuinely original idea
Chris Isham, a physicist from Imperial College London, explores the link between quantum theory and its usefulness in modern life. His work on Topos Theory earned him the 2011 Dirac Medal and offers a new framework for applying mathematics to physics.
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Cosmic ray detective
Professor Alan Watson from the University of Leeds was awarded the 2011 Faraday Medal by the Institute of Physics for his outstanding leadership within the Pierre Auger Observatory, and the insights he has provided to the origin and nature of ultra high energy cosmic rays.