Funding to develop tomorrow's technologyFebruary 26, 2002The University of Sussex is the only university to receive two awards from a new multi-million-pound government fund that aims to revolutionise scientific research and innovation. Two initiatives at Sussex are to be supported by the Basic Technology Research Programme, which is being managed by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) on behalf of all of the government-funded research councils in the UK. A total of 229 outline applications were received, 26 of which were invited to submit full proposals and just eight of which are to receive funding. Ed Hinds, Professor of Experimental Physics at Sussex, successfully bid for £1.3 million to develop a technology that should make possible a future generation of computers and sensors. Professor Hinds and his team will use the laws of quantum mechanics to manipulate cold atoms and form extremely sensitive instruments known as 'atom chips'. This might permit increasing miniaturisation of electronics and will help to achieve computing power far greater than is possible in conventional computers, which use the motion of electrons down wires. Terry Clark, Professor of Physical Electronics, put in a successful bid of just under £1 million for a project that aims to make a revolutionary advance in the detection of electrical fields. The non-contact electrical sensor that Professor Clark is developing can be used in any area that has electrical activity, such as the human heart. He has already filed a patent application for a remote sensor that could allow doctors to monitor a patient's heartbeat from a distance. Other potential applications are as diverse as the imaging of single biological cells and geophysical surveying for oil and mineral deposits. Sussex, University of |
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