3 Oct 2016
Sean
Ryan
GRADnet
Postgraduate
GRADnet is pleased to announce the Induction event for Physics PGRs from across SEPnet.
Who: �1st Year Physics PhD students. All SEPnet Departments expect all new students to attend. When:� 26 October 2016, 10:15-16:00 Where:��Park Crescent Conference Centre, 229 Great Portland Street, London, W1W 5PN.
Numbers: This event is strongly recommended by all SEPnet partner Departments.� Circa 100 students are expected to attend. Students are to sign up for two workshops on arrival and attend one in the morning and one in the afternoon.
Register�here. �Or with your local GRADnet administrator. Deadline to register is 19 October 2016. Please ensure you have your VRE account activated. What:� A one day introduction to GRADnet to learn more about opportunities, to meet fellow researchers from across the network and to participate in two from five short workshops designed to get you started in key areas of activity.
LaTeX. LaTeX is a document preparation system widely used�by physical scientists for the creation of scientific�papers, reports and theses, indeed many key journals require paper submission in LaTeX. You will learn to create a simple document covering the key components�� title, abstract, sections, tables, equations, figures, and references.
MATLAB. Matlab is a high-level technical computing language and interactive environment for algorithm development, data analysis and visualization, and numerical computation.� MATLAB can solve technical computing problems faster and more easily than with traditional programming languages, such as C, C++, and FORTRAN.
Python. Python is a powerful, high-level scripting language that is widely used in scientific research for a huge range of data� analysis and visualisation applications. In this workshop you will learn how to use Python, starting from basic scripts to explore syntax and data types, working up to more complicated 'real world' examples.
Getting your research published.� This workshop will explain the steps necessary to take the results of your research through to a�published paper.� Led by �insiders� from IOP Publishing, it will explain what makes a good paper and why some authors succeed while others do not.
Meetings and conferences. �A major part of many students� PhD is organising meetings; meetings with supervisors,�collaborators, sponsors and broader workshops and conferences.� This is a practical workshop designed to help you organise conferences, meetings and events from start to finish, without compromising your research.