Institute for Micro and Nano Systems Themes

Institute for Micro and Nano Systems Research Themes

A paper on “How to process billions of photons a second” for ultrafast and accurate 3D imaging by Dr Julián Tachella, Dr Michael Sheehan and Professor Mike Davies has won Best Student Paper award at ICASSP 2022, the top international signal processing conference.

 Figure shows 3D imaging performance of a Lidar camera in a setting with strong background illumination. Top left: an image processed “pixelwise” – or pixel by pixel – results in a “noisy” image, with less definition and accuracy. Image quality can be substantially improved with spatial regularization algorithms such as RT3D (top right). However, in both cases the data transfer involved is prohibitive. Bottom row: the pixelwise sketched Lidar reconstruction (left), and the sketched RT3D images (right). In b

Closing Date: 

Thursday, June 30, 2022

There is huge potential for growth in the cross-over between bioelectronics and synthetic biology. We aim to develop an interface that allows information transfer between the two domains.

School of Engineering PhD student Daisy Dickinson was recently named a finalist in STEM for Britain – a prestigious scientific poster competition and exhibition held each year at the Houses of Parliament.

PhD student Daisy Dickinson presented her work at the Houses of Parliament

Closing Date: 

Monday, February 28, 2022

In the next decade, distributed sensor network systems made of insect-scale flying sensors will enable a step change in monitoring natural disasters and remote areas.

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