Academia
As one of the UK's funding research
councils, the Science
& Technology Facilities Council (STFC) has extensive links
with the academic community, both nationally and overseas.
The STFC's unique role, as the UK's provider of large research
facilities, naturally places it as a central hub for science and
technology departments within the university sector. In
addition, the STFC Central Laboratories and the Cockcroft
Institute have extremely well-established networks with other
overseas laboratories and major facilities. Collaborations
extend from technical, engineering and instrumentation development
to end user scientific exploitation by STFC in-house scientists
based at the Daresbury Laboratory.
The STFC is also host to a number of related national networks
linking UK academia to their core science and technology
programmes. For example, they co-fund the Sensors and
Instrumentation Knowledge Transfer Network (KTN) which covers
the whole of the UK's sensing community, from academics and large
industries to small businesses, research councils and government
departments. The Sensors & Instrumentation KTN embraces
sensing in its entirety - from the principles of measurement and
novel sensor technologies to instrumentation, deployment and data
analysis. The KTN is a central point of access for sensing
information and assistance and much of its success comes from
connecting people in supply chains, interest groups and
collaborations.
In addition, through the Computational Science and Engineering
Department at Daresbury, the STFC is host to a number of Collaborative
Computational Projects (CCPs) which assist universities in
developing, maintaining and distributing computer programs and
promoting the best computational methods. These CCPs are funded by
the STFC, the Engineering
and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the Biotechnology
and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and are
focussed on specific areas of research.
At the local level, Daresbury SIC draws great benefit from the
stakeholder relationship it has with the three Universities of Lancaster, Liverpool and Manchester. This takes the
form of a fully integrated relationship (for example the staff of
the Cockcroft Institute are drawn from these three institutions) as
well as through a host of links at many various functional levels
within all of the stakeholder organisations.
The STFC can act as a portal into these significant scientific,
technical and innovation networks for campus tenants
and partners.