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University collects Queen’s Anniversary Prize at Buckingham Palace today

A delegation from the University is at Buckingham Palace today to collect the Queen’s Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education, awarded for our world-leading expertise in photonics.

Professor Sir David Payne and Professor Nikolai Zheludev of the ORC receiving the Queen’s Anniversary Prize from HRH Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall.

The Queen’s Anniversary Prizes are the UK’s most prestigious form of recognition for a UK academic or vocational institution, with approval directly from HM The Queen and Parliament.

Left to right: Dr Katrina Morgan, Ausra Cerkauskaite, Andrea Ravagli, Angeles Camacho and Alex Jantzen – part of the delegation who travelled to Buckingham Palace to receive the Queen’s Anniversary Prize.

This year’s Queen’s Anniversary Prize for Southampton recognises the many decades of inspired innovation by the University’s Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) – the largest and longest established centre of its kind in the UK.

The work of the Centre has led to technological breakthroughs in optical fibres, laser manufacturing, next generational computing and new optical materials that now power the internet, create mobile telephone networks and provide us with other services like cash dispensers that transform our daily lives.

As well as its extensive links with companies and universities around the world, the Centre is the catalyst for a major research and commercial hub within Southampton and the surrounding area. The ORC is also renowned for its outreach activities with schools and colleges, delivering activities to encourage more students to study physics and engineering.

Professor Sir David Payne

 

 

 

 

 

 

Professor Sir David Payne, Director of the ORC, says:

“Being honoured with this prestigious award is recognition of just how important photonics is to the UK and the extensive role the University of Southampton has played in leading photonics research since the 1960s.

“Today hundreds of millions of kilometres of optical fibre carry the signals on the internet,”

Sir David was knighted in 2013 for his work in photonics research and applications development.  He continues:

“Our speciality optical fibre inventions now navigate airliners, cut steel and can be found on the moon, Mars and the International Space Station.”

https://youtu.be/hEWAMyaQ95M

The Vice-Chancellor has recorded a congratulatory video, this can be watched above or here. (Subtitles are available, click the CC icon below the video)

Professor Sir Christopher Snowden said of the award:

“This is a really exciting opportunity for the University to celebrate a really important award and it also recognises the contributions that we have made over many years.”

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