
OPTOS plc
OPTOS plc
6 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:NPL, Heriot-Watt University, Science and Technology Facilities Council, AWE plc, Amethyst Research Ltd +62 partnersNPL,Heriot-Watt University,Science and Technology Facilities Council,AWE plc,Amethyst Research Ltd,OXFORD,SULSA,British Energy Generation Ltd,Coherent UK Ltd,Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),SCURL,Canon Medical Research Europe Ltd,Photon Force Ltd,MTC,Leonardo,Optocap Ltd,Cascade Technologies Ltd,Canon Medical Research Europe Ltd,SINAPSE,Coherent Scotland Ltd,Scottish Funding Council,Scottish Univ Physics Alliance (SUPA),SELEX Sensors & Airborne Systems Ltd,Thales Aerospace,Gooch and Housego (Torquay) Ltd,OPTOS plc,AWE,Cascade Technologies (United States),PhotonForce,Cascade Technologies (United Kingdom),NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde,OPTOS plc,Amethyst Research Ltd,Oxford Lasers Ltd,Lightpoint Medical Ltd,NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde,Radius Diagnostics Ltd,pureLiFi Ltd,Lightpoint Medical Ltd,Gas Sensing Solutions Ltd,SFC,Adaptix,Optocap Ltd,RENISHAW,STFC - Laboratories,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Rutherford Appleton Laboratory,Heriot-Watt University,Rutherford Appleton Laboratory,ST Microelectronics Limited (UK),Wideblue Ltd,Chromacity Ltd.,Gas Sensing Solutions (United Kingdom),Chromacity Ltd.,Thales Group,British Telecom,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Gooch and Housego (Torquay) Ltd,Wideblue Polaroid (UK) Ltd,DSTL,The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd,Synapse,BT Group (United Kingdom),Diameter Ltd,ST Microelectronics Limited (UK),pureLiFi LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S022821/1Funder Contribution: 5,147,690 GBPIn a consortium led by Heriot-Watt with St Andrews, Glasgow, Strathclyde, Edinburgh and Dundee, this proposal for an "EPSRC CDT in Industry-Inspired Photonic Imaging, Sensing and Analysis" responds to the priority area in Imaging, Sensing and Analysis. It recognises the foundational role of photonics in many imaging and sensing technologies, while also noting the exciting opportunities to enhance their performance using emerging computational techniques like machine learning. Photonics' role in sensing and imaging is hard to overstate. Smart and autonomous systems are driving growth in lasers for automotive lidar and smartphone gesture recognition; photonic structural-health monitoring protects our road, rail, air and energy infrastructure; and spectroscopy continues to find new applications from identifying forgeries to detecting chemical-warfare agents. UK photonics companies addressing the sensing and imaging market are vital to our economy (see CfS) but their success is threatened by a lack of doctoral-level researchers with a breadth of knowledge and understanding of photonic imaging, sensing and analysis, coupled with high-level business, management and communication skills. By ensuring a supply of these individuals, our CDT will consolidate the UK industrial knowledge base, driving the high-growth export-led sectors of the economy whose photonics-enabled products and services have far-reaching impacts on society, from consumer technology and mobile computing devices to healthcare and security. Building on the success of our CDT in Applied Photonics, the proposed CDT will be configured with most (40) students pursuing an EngD degree, characterised by a research project originated by a company and hosted on their site. Recognizing that companies' interests span all technology readiness levels, we are introducing a PhD stream where some (15) students will pursue industrially relevant research in university labs, with more flexibility and technical risk than would be possible in an EngD project. Overwhelming industry commitment for over 100 projects represents a nearly 100% industrial oversubscription, with £4.38M cash and £5.56M in-kind support offered by major stakeholders including Fraunhofer UK, NPL, Renishaw, Thales, Gooch and Housego and Leonardo, as well as a number of SMEs. Our request to EPSRC for £4.86M will support 35 students, from a total of 40 EngD and 15 PhD researchers. The remaining students will be funded by industrial (£2.3M) and university (£0.93M) contributions, giving an exceptional 2:3 cash gearing of EPSRC funding, with more students trained and at a lower cost / head to the taxpayer than in our current CDT. For our centre to be reactive to industry's needs a diverse pool of supervisors is required. Across the consortium we have identified 72 core supervisors and a further 58 available for project supervision, whose 1679 papers since 2013 include 154 in Science / Nature / PRL, and whose active RCUK PI funding is £97M. All academics are experienced supervisors, with many current or former CDT supervisors. An 8-month frontloaded residential phase in St Andrews and Edinburgh will ensure the cohort gels strongly, and will equip students with the knowledge and skills they need before beginning their research projects. Business modules (x3) will bring each cohort back to Heriot-Watt for 1-week periods, and weekend skills workshops will be used to regularly reunite the cohort, further consolidating the peer-to-peer network. Core taught courses augmented with specialist options will total 120 credits, and will be supplemented by professional skills and responsible innovation training delivered by our industry partners and external providers. Governance will follow our current model, with a mixed academic-industry Management Committee and an independent International Advisory Board of world-leading experts.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2023Partners:University of Twente, UT, NPL, Thales UK Ltd, ROE +54 partnersUniversity of Twente,UT,NPL,Thales UK Ltd,ROE,Nanoflex Limited,Fraunhofer,CENSIS,Modern Built Environment,SULSA,THALES UK,Qioptiq Ltd,University of Ottawa,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,University of Glasgow,Cambridge Integrated Knowledge Centre,University of Glasgow,Spirit Aerosystems (UK),Duke University,University of Twente,Wolfson Microelectronics,Texas Instruments Ltd,STFC,UK ATC,SCURL,Technology Strategy Board (Innovate UK),Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Scottish Univ Physics Alliance (SUPA),SELEX Sensors & Airborne Systems Ltd,Thales Aerospace,Selex-ES Ltd,OPTOS plc,Nanoflex Limited,FHG,Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Fdn Trust,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,SU2P,Pennsylvania State University,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,OPTOS plc,ST Microelectronics Limited (UK),Innovate UK,PSU,Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Fdn Trust,Qioptiq Limited,Spirit Aerosystems,TI,Selex ES Ltd,CENSIS,Duke University,UK Astronomy Technology Centre,Penn State University College of Medicin,DSTL,ST Microelectronics Limited (UK),Wolfson Microelectronics,UKRI,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Knowledge Transfer Networks KTN,SU2PFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L016753/1Funder Contribution: 4,940,910 GBPWe propose a Centre for Doctoral Training in Integrative Sensing and Measurement that addresses the unmet UK need for specialist training in innovative sensing and measurement systems identified by EPSRC priorities the TSB and EPOSS . The proposed CDT will benefit from the strategic, targeted investment of >£20M by the partners in enhancing sensing and measurement research capability and by alignment with the complementary, industry-focused Innovation Centre in Sensor and Imaging Systems (CENSIS). This investment provides both the breadth and depth required to provide high quality cohort-based training in sensing across the sciences, medicine and engineering and into the myriad of sensing applications, whilst ensuring PhD supervision by well-resourced internationally leading academics with a passion for sensor science and technology. The synergistic partnership of GU and UoE with their active sensors-related research collaborations with over 160 companies provides a unique research excellence and capability to provide a dynamic and innovative research programme in sensing and measurement to fuel the development pipeline from initial concept to industrial exploitation.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2027Partners:McGill University, Aalto University, FUJIFILM DIOSYNTH BIOTECHNOLOGIES UK LIMITED, University of California, Berkeley, EpiCypher Inc +27 partnersMcGill University,Aalto University,FUJIFILM DIOSYNTH BIOTECHNOLOGIES UK LIMITED,University of California, Berkeley,EpiCypher Inc,Synpromics Ltd,MICROSOFT RESEARCH LIMITED,3Brain AG,Kernix,NUS,QUT,UiO,NHS Lothian,IST Austria,Data Kitchen,Canon Medical Research Europe Ltd,UCB UK,UofT,INRIA Research Centre Saclay,AstraZeneca plc,OPTOS plc,IBM (United Kingdom),Max Delbruck Centre for Molecular Med,BioTSptech Ltd,The Alan Turing Institute,EPFZ,University of Edinburgh,Harvard University,IBM (United States),RIKEN,QuantumBlack,Université Paris DiderotFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S02431X/1Funder Contribution: 6,779,380 GBPAddressing the health needs of a growing and ageing population is a central challenge facing modern society. Technology is enabling the collection of increasingly large and heterogeneous biomedical data sets, yet interpreting such data to gain knowledge about disease mechanisms and clinical and preventative strategies is still a major open problem. Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques hold huge promise to provide an integrative framework for extracting knowledge from data, with a high potential for fundamental and clinical breakthroughs with significant impact both on public health and on the future of the UK bioeconomy. The ambition of the proposed CDT is to train a cadre of highly skilled interdisciplinary scientists who will spearhead the development and deployment of AI techniques in the biomedical sector. Achieving our long-term aims will require several hurdles to be overcome. The biomedical sector poses unique methodological challenges to AI technology, due to the need of interpretable models which can quantify uncertainties within predictions. It also presents formidable cultural and technical language barriers, requiring honed communication skills to overcome disciplinary boundaries. Perhaps most importantly, it requires researchers and practitioners with a keen awareness of the societal, legal and ethical dimension of their research, who are able to reach out to societal stakeholders, and to anticipate and engage with the potential issues arising from deploying AI technology in the biomedical sector. We will realise our ambition through a structured training programme: students will initially acquire the foundational skills in a Master by Research first year, which includes taught courses on the technical, biomedical and socio-ethical aspects of biomedical AI, and provides multiple opportunities to directly experience interdisciplinary research through rotation projects. Students will then acquire in depth research experience through an interdisciplinary PhD, bridging between the University of Edinburgh's world-leading institutions pursuing informatics and biomedical research. Students will benefit from a large and exceptionally distinguished faculty of potential supervisors: over 60 academics including several fellows of the Royal Society/ Royal Society of Edinburgh, and over forty recipients of prestigious fellowships from the ERC, the research councils, and biomedical charities such as the Wellcome Trust. This training programme will be interleaved with intensive training in interdisciplinary communication and science communication, and will offer multiple opportunities to engage with external stakeholders including industrial and NHS internships.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2025Partners:COVESION LTD, Airbus (UK), M Squared Lasers Ltd, Motor Industry Research Assoc. (MIRA), NPL +68 partnersCOVESION LTD,Airbus (UK),M Squared Lasers Ltd,Motor Industry Research Assoc. (MIRA),NPL,JCC Bowers,Kromek,Sequestim Ltd,Qioptiq Ltd,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,University of Glasgow,HORIBA Jobin Yvon IBH,Teledyne e2v (UK) Ltd,University of Glasgow,Horiba Mira Ltd,QLM Technology Ltd,Kromek,STMicroelectronics,CST,Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,QLM Technology Ltd.,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),PXYL,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,Photon Force Ltd,ID Quantique UK Ltd,SELEX Sensors & Airborne Systems Ltd,Thales Aerospace,Durham Scientific Crystals Ltd,Dotphoton SA,STMicroelectronics (United Kingdom),OPTOS plc,PhotonForce,Leonardo (UK),KNT,STMicroelectronics,EADS Airbus,Leonardo,Gooch & Housego (United Kingdom),Aralia Systems,BAE Systems (Sweden),Aralia Systems,OPTOS plc,Gas Sensing Solutions (United Kingdom),Thales Group,Kelvin Nanotechnology Ltd,ID Quantique UK Ltd,National Physical Laboratory NPL,PXYL,HORIBA Jobin Yvon IBH,Clyde Space Ltd,Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,e2v technologies plc,GOOCH & HOUSEGO PLC,BAE Systems (UK),Gas Sensing Solutions Ltd,TREL,Dotphoton,Gooch & Housego (United Kingdom),DSTL,Clyde Space,Toshiba Research Europe Ltd,M Squared Lasers (United Kingdom),QinetiQ,Horiba Mira Ltd,Thales Group (UK),Covesion Ltd,Horiba Jobin Yvon IBH Ltd,Airbus (United Kingdom),Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Compound Semiconductor Tech Global Ltd,JCC Bowers,Sequestim LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/T00097X/1Funder Contribution: 24,961,200 GBPQuantum physics describes how nature links the properties of isolated microscopic objects through interactions mediated by so-called quantum entanglement and that apply not just to atoms but also to particles of light, "photons". These discoveries led to the first "quantum revolution", delivering a range of transformative technologies such as the transistor and the laser that we now take for granted. We are now on the cusp of a second "quantum revolution", which will, over the next 5-10 years, yield a new generation of electronic and photonic devices that exploit quantum science. The challenge is to secure a leadership position in the race to the industrialisation of quantum physics to claim a large share of this emerging global market, which is expected to be worth £1 billion to the UK economy. QuantIC, the UK's centre for quantum imaging, was formed over four years ago to apply quantum technologies to the development of new cameras with unique imaging capabilities. Tangible impacts are the creation of 3 new companies (Sequestim, QLM and Raycal), technology translation into products through licencing (Timepix chip - Kromek) and the ongoing development with industry of a further 12 product prototypes. Moving forward, QuantIC will continue to drive paradigm-changing imaging systems such as the ability to see directly inside the human body, the ability to see through fog and smoke, to make microscopes with higher resolution and lower noise than classical physics allows and quantum radars that cannot be jammed or confused by other radars around them. These developments will be enabled by new technologies, such as single-photon cameras, detectors based on new materials and single-photon sensitivity in the mid-infrared spectral regions. Combined with our new computational methods, QuantIC will enable UK industry to lead the global imaging revolution. QuantIC will dovetail into other significant investments in the Quantum technology transfer ecosystem which is emerging in the UK. The University of Glasgow has allocated one floor of the £118M research hub to supporting fundamental research in quantum science and £28M towards the creation of the Clyde Waterfront Innovation Campus, a new £80M development in collaboration with Glasgow City Council and Scottish Enterprise focussing on the translation of nano and quantum science for enabling technologies such as photonics, optoelectronics and quantum. Heriot-Watt has invested over £2M in new quantum optics laboratories and is currently building a £20M Global Research Innovation and Discovery Centre opening in 2019 to drive the translation of emerging technologies. Bristol is creating a £43M Quantum Innovation centre which already has £21M of industrial investment. Strathclyde University is creating a second £150M Technology Innovation Centre around 6 priority areas, one of which is Quantum Technology. All of these form part of the wider UK Quantum Technology Programme which is set to transform the UK's world leading science into commercial reality in line with the UK's drive towards a high productivity and high-skill economy. QuantIC will lead the quantum imaging research agenda and act as the bond between parallel activities and investments, thus ensuring paradigm-changing innovation that will transform tomorrow's society.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2024Partners:MSC, NPL, MSC Software Ltd, Vector Four Ltd, Ethical Intelligence +41 partnersMSC,NPL,MSC Software Ltd,Vector Four Ltd,Ethical Intelligence,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Digital Health and Care Institute,NVIDIA Limited,NASA Ames Research Center,Adelard,Aesthetic Integration Ltd,Altran UK Ltd,Microsoft Corporation (USA),The Civil Aviation Authority,SICSA,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,University of Edinburgh,Vector Four Ltd,Legal & General,Thales UK Limited,Legal & General,Altran UK Ltd,UK Civil Aviation Authority,Microsoft (United States),Aesthetic Integration Ltd.,Thales Aerospace,BAE Systems,OPTOS plc,CAA,Digital Health and Care Institute,NVIDIA Limited (UK),OPTOS plc,NASA Ames Research Centre,Craft Prospect Ltd,NASA Ames Research Center,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,THALES UK LIMITED,Craft Prospect Ltd,SICSA,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Ethical Intelligence,Adelard LLP,DSTL,D-RisQ Ltd,D-RisQ Ltd,BAE SYSTEMS PLCFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026607/1Funder Contribution: 2,671,810 GBPHow can we trust autonomous computer-based systems? Autonomous means "independent and having the power to make your own decisions". This proposal tackles the issue of trusting autonomous systems (AS) by building: experience of regulatory structure and practice, notions of cause, responsibility and liability, and tools to create evidence of trustworthiness into modern development practice. Modern development practice includes continuous integration and continuous delivery. These practices allow continuous gathering of operational experience, its amplification through the use of simulators, and the folding of that experience into development decisions. This, combined with notions of anticipatory regulation and incremental trust building form the basis for new practice in the development of autonomous systems where regulation, systems, and evidence of dependable behaviour co-evolve incrementally to support our trust in systems. This proposal is in consortium with a multi-disciplinary team from Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt, Glasgow, KCL, Nottingham and Sussex, bringing together computer science and AI specialists, legal scholars, AI ethicists, as well as experts in science and technology studies and design ethnography. Together, we present a novel software engineering and governance methodology that includes: 1) New frameworks that help bridge gaps between legal and ethical principles (including emerging questions around privacy, fairness, accountability and transparency) and an autonomous systems design process that entails rapid iterations driven by emerging technologies (including, e.g. machine learning in-the-loop decision making systems) 2) New tools for an ecosystem of regulators, developers and trusted third parties to address not only functionality or correctness (the focus of many other Nodes) but also questions of how systems fail, and how one can manage evidence associated with this to facilitate better governance. 3) Evidence base from full-cycle case studies of taking AS through regulatory processes, as experienced by our partners, to facilitate policy discussion regarding reflexive regulation practices.
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