SPIE and University of Glasgow announce $1 million quantum photonics programme

Published: 28 July 2020

The University of Glasgow is partnering with SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, to establish the SPIE Early Career Researcher Accelerator Fund in Quantum Photonics.

The University of Glasgow is partnering with SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, to establish the SPIE Early Career Researcher Accelerator Fund in Quantum Photonics.
 
A $500,000 gift from the SPIE Endowment Matching Program will be matched 100% by the University, creating a fund worth a total of $1m (£785,000).
 
The programme will support a diverse group of graduate students working in the field of quantum photonics and will be managed by Professor Daniele Faccio, Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Technologies, and Kelvin Chair of Natural Philosophy Professor Miles Padgett. Prof Daniele Faccio examines an optical experiment on a lab bench while wearing a pair of safety glasses.
 
The fund will create two new programs at the University: a new, annual SPIE Early Career Researcher in Quantum Photonics Scholarship will be awarded to an outstanding University of Glasgow graduate student who is in the process of completing their studies.
 
In addition, the SPIE Global Early Career Research programme will support outgoing and incoming placements at and from the University as part of its ongoing collaboration with leading quantum-photonics research groups across the globe.
 
Each year, the programme will pair several University early-career researchers with counterparts from outside laboratories for six-month-long shared projects.
 
SPIE President John Greivenkamp said: “We are delighted to be participating in these exciting endeavours with the University of Glasgow. The interactive placements will offer transformative opportunities the university’s academic and industry-based researchers, and, together with the annual scholarship, will develop well-prepared, knowledgeable early-career researchers who will drive the future of the quantum industry.”
 
Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli, principal and vice-chancellor of the University of Glasgow, added: “We’re pleased and proud to be establishing the Early Career Researcher Accelerator Fund in Quantum Photonics thanks to SPIE’s generous gift, which we’re very happy to match with our own funding.
 
“The University’s quantum photonics expertise is world-leading, and our researchers have found ways to see through walls, capture images at a trillion frames per second, and take the very first pictures of quantum entanglement in action. This additional funding will help the University train a new generation of graduate students to make valuable contributions to academia and industry and inspire them to make their own amazing research breakthroughs.”
 
The SPIE Endowment Matching Program, established in 2019, is a $2.5 million, five-year, educational-funding initiative designed to increase international capacity in the teaching and research of optics and photonics. SPIE supports optics and photonics education and the future of the industry by contributing a match of up to $500,000 per award to college and university programmes with optics and photonics degrees, or with other disciplines allied to the SPIE mission.
 
The initial SPIE contribution to the University of Arizona named a new endowed faculty chair, the SPIE Chair in Optical Sciences. Four more agreements announced earlier this year established the SPIE-Glebov Family Optics and Photonics Graduate Scholarship Fund and the Soileau Family-SPIE Optics and Photonics Undergraduate Scholarship Fund, both at the University of Central Florida’s (UCF) College of Optics and Photonics (CREOL), the Baur-SPIE Endowed Chair in Optics and Photonics at JILA, and the SPIE@ICFO Chair for Diversity in Photonic Sciences.


First published: 28 July 2020

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