| Qualification Type: | PhD |
|---|---|
| Location: | Birmingham |
| Funding for: | UK Students, EU Students, International Students |
| Funding amount: | This is a competition-funded PhD project. |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Placed On: | 19th January 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 16th April 2026 |
About the Project
Capture when and where each photon lands—build the instrument that makes it possible.
Project Overview
This PhD project focuses on developing the Photonic Time–Space Correlator (PhoTiSC)—a novel instrument that can measure both the arrival time and position of photons with exceptional precision. Current solutions for 3D imaging and time resolved microscopy are either prohibitively expensive or limited in speed and accuracy. PhoTiSC offers a cost effective alternative by combining an ultrafast timing detector with a position sensitive sensor, enabling simultaneous time–space correlation at sub nanosecond resolution.
As a PhD researcher, you will take PhoTiSC from concept to prototype: designing and integrating optical and electronic components, validating performance in the lab, and deploying the system in real experiments. This technology has applications in advanced microscopy, compact LiDAR systems, and scientific imaging, with strong potential for industrial impact and commercialisation. You will gain hands on experience in optics, high speed electronics, FPGA based readout, and data analysis, while collaborating with leading academic and industrial partners.
What You’ll Do
Training & Environment
Impact
Career Prospects
Graduates will be competitive for roles in:
You’ll leave with a portfolio of hardware prototypes, data analysis tools, and industry engagement experience.
Candidate Profile
Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
The School of Physics and Astronomy is an Institute of Physics Juno Champion since 2014 and holder of the Athena SWAN Silver Award. Both initiatives recognise the School’s commitment to promote diversity and equality, and to encourage better practice for all members of the community, whilst also working towards developing an equitable working culture in which all students and staff can achieve their full potential. We welcome applications from all qualified applicants, and encourage applications from traditionally under-represented groups in physics and astronomy including, but not limited to, women and Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic.
How to Apply
Apply via the University of Birmingham portal with:
Start date: October 2026
Informal enquiries: Dr Andre Kaplan – a.kaplan.1@bham.ac.uk
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