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University of Manchester Faculty of Science and Engineering

The Faculty of Science and Engineering (FSE) is one of the three faculties that comprise the University of Manchester in northern England. Established in October 2004, the faculty was originally called the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences (EPS). It was renamed in 2016, following the abolition of the Faculty of Life Science and the incorporation of some aspects of life sciences into the departments of Chemistry and Earth and Environmental Sciences. It is organised into 2 schools and 10 departments: Chemical Engineering; Chemistry; Civil Engineering and Management; Computer Science; Earth and Environmental Sciences; Physics and Astronomy; Electrical & Electronic Engineering; Materials; Mathematics; and Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

History
The University of Manchester has a long and distinguished record of achievement in science and engineering disciplines, and a history of breaking new ground. Rutherford began his work on splitting the atom at the university (and later received the Nobel Prize in 1908 for his work on radioactivity). The world's first electronic stored-program computer, the Manchester Baby, came into being at the university, as did its successor, the Manchester Mark 1. The University of Manchester was the birthplace of Chemical Engineering. The world's first steerable radio telescope at Jodrell Bank was built at the University by Bernard Lovell. Since 1906, when former student Joseph Thompson won the Nobel Prize in Physics, the faculty and its antecedent institutions have produced more than 11 Nobel laureates in Physics out of the 25 awarded to staff or students of the University of Manchester as a whole. Most recently, Manchester physicists Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov won the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics for their pioneering work with graphene. The university's history is closely linked to Manchester's emergence as the world's first industrial city. Manchester businessmen and industrialists established the Mechanics' Institute to ensure that their workers could learn the basic principles of science. Similarly, John Owens, a Manchester textile merchant, left a bequest of £96,942 in 1851 for the purpose of founding a college for the education of males on non-sectarian lines. Owens College was established and granted a royal charter in 1880 to become England's first civic university, The Victoria University of Manchester. ==Industrial links==
Industrial links
By 1905, the two institutions were a large and active force in the area, with the Mechanics' Institute, the forerunner of the modern UMIST, forming a Faculty of Technology and working alongside The Victoria University of Manchester. Although UMIST achieved independent university status in 1955, the two universities continued to work together, true to the visions of their pioneering industrialist founders, until they formally combined on 22 October 2004 to form a single university. The Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences became home to a $100 million international research centre (2012), known as the BP International Centre for Advanced Materials (BP-ICAM). BP-ICAM is modelled on a “hub and spoke” structure, with the ‘hub’ located at The University of Manchester and the “spokes” located at the University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. ==Organisation Structure==
Organisation Structure
The Faculty of Science and Engineering comprises two schools, the School of Engineering and the School of Natural sciences. School of Engineering: • Department of Chemical Engineering • Department of Civil Engineering and Management • Department of Computer ScienceDepartment of Electrical and Electronic EngineeringDepartment of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering School of Natural Sciences: • Department of MaterialsDepartment of Earth and Environmental SciencesDepartment of MathematicsDepartment of ChemistryDepartment of Physics and Astronomy The Faculty also includes nine Research Institutes: • Manchester Institute of Biotechnology • Photon Science Institute • Dalton Nuclear Institute • University of Manchester Aerospace Research Institute • BP International Centre for Advanced Materials • National Graphene InstituteSir Henry Royce Institute for Advanced Materials • Thomas Ashton Institute • Manchester Environmental Research Institute ==References==
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