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TU Delft in top 50 QS-ranking

Almost all Dutch universities are gaining ground in the world rankings by British research firm QS. TU Delft rises from place 61 last year to 47 now. One reason: the makers have revamped their methodology. Among other things, the QS World University Rankings now look at whether universities contribute to the 17 goals of the United Nations.

The main criterion in the rankings remains the university‘s reputation among scientists and employers, but the balance shifts in this. Scientists now weigh slightly less, while employers’ opinions are given more emphasis. Other criteria include the internationalization of staff and students, citation scores of scientific articles, the number of students per lecturer, and students’ performance in the labor market.

At the top, little changes. The US MIT is at the top for the 12th time and the British University of Cambridge is number two, as it was last year.

Dutch Universities Association UNL makes a comment on its website: “A ranking paints an incomplete picture of reality. The strength of higher education institutions is, pre-eminently, their mutual diversity. The pitfall of rankings is that they paint a global picture that does (too) little justice to the complexity of what is being measured.”

Delta

BTW, according to the QS WUR Ranking by Subject, we are #15 in Electrical and Electronic Engineering!

TU Delta: Millions for TU Delft-led radar project

The TU Delft-led PHARA consortium will receive millions of euros in funding from NWO. The researchers are developing a new type of radar that can observe the entire sky in a few seconds, to study how particles grow in clouds and rainfall, and observe large movements of weather fronts. The transportable radar should contribute to climate and atmospheric research, more accurate weather forecasts, and further innovations in radar technology.

NWO is putting a total of EUR 22.7 million into seven projects in which scientists from all over the Netherlands are developing high-quality research equipment, data collection, and software. The contribution ranges from 2.3 to 4.7 million euros per project.

With the money, the research funder wants to encourage scientists to work together to keep the Netherlands‘ scientific infrastructure up to date. According to NWO president Marcel Levi, the seven awarded projects enable new research that has great added value for society. As recently as February, NWO together with the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science awarded 140 million euros from the ‘national roadmap’ for exceptionally large research equipment and databases. (HOP, HC)

Delta

Congratulations!

Opening ceremony of the EmC XG Labs

Barbara McCune, wife of the late Earl McCune, and Lucas van Vliet, Dean of the EEMCS Faculty, inaugurated the Earl McCune XG Labs on April 17th, 2023. Many people attended the ceremony, both from the Microelectronics department as well as external partners such as TNO, Nokia, Rohde&Schwarz, BSW…

The EmC XG Labs receives its name from Prof. Earl McCune (EmC), who enabled the neXt Generation (XG) communication and sensing efforts at TU Delft thanks to his great enthusiasm, his vast amount of knowledge, and his warm personality.

The EmC XG Labs consists of a cluster of state-of-the-art microwave laboratories, covering the frequency spectrum from 30 kHz to 500 GHz, able to perform measurements on packaged, on-wafer, and over-the-air devices and systems, providing an excellent frame for students, scholars, and faculty members to carry out their research.

Pascal’s Jubileum

Basic principles Corona & TU Delft

The MS3 Master Market 2020


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Season’s Greetings from EEMCS Faculty

MS3 demonstrates a few radar sensors for automotive applications during the Future of Driving Symposium

New MSc course EE5020 “Sensor signal and data processing”

During the lecture

During the lecture

Explanations on blackboard

Explanations on blackboard