Newton International Fellowship
The Newton International Fellowship, named after Sir Isaac Newton, is an international postdoctoral award for selected foreign academics to carry out research at institutions in the United Kingdom.
Award description
Established by the Royal Society, British Academy, and Royal Academy of Engineering, the Fellowships are awarded annually to approximately 25 of the most outstanding early career academics from across the world, in all disciplines of the sciences and humanities. Key objectives of the Newton Fellowship are to bring the best early career academics to the UK and to enhance ties between these academics’ home countries and the UK.[1] Newton Fellows are fully funded for a period of three years and awarded coverage of research expenses up to £8,000 per year, with a maximum award value since 2023 of £420,000.[2] This award is intended to facilitate the development of a continuous research program and to support continued engagement with UK-based researchers.[3]
Criteria
Applicants to the Fellowship must not hold UK citizenship and must be working outside the UK at the time of the application. It is required that applicants hold a PhD by the time the funding starts. Applicants should have no more than 7 years of active full-time postdoctoral experience at the time of application (discounting career breaks, but including teaching experience and/or time spent in industry).[4]
References
- ^ Royal Society Newton International Fellowship (2015) Royal Society Newton International Fellowship, www.royalsociety.org. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
- ^ "Newton International Fellowships | Royal Society". 23 January 2024.
- ^ British Academy Newton International Fellowships Scheme (2015) Newton International Fellowships Scheme, www.britac.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ^ Royal Society Newton International Fellowship (2015) Royal Society Newton International Fellowship, www.royalsociety.org. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
External links
- Official site
- The Royal Society website
- v
- t
- e
- Fluxions (1671)
- De Motu (1684)
- Principia (1687)
- Opticks (1704)
- Queries (1704)
- Arithmetica (1707)
- De Analysi (1711)
- Quaestiones (1661–1665)
- "standing on the shoulders of giants" (1675)
- Notes on the Jewish Temple (c. 1680)
- "General Scholium" (1713; "hypotheses non fingo" )
- Ancient Kingdoms Amended (1728)
- Corruptions of Scripture (1754)
- Bucket argument
- Newton's inequalities
- Newton's law of cooling
- Newton's law of universal gravitation
- Newton–Cartan theory
- Schrödinger–Newton equation
- Newton's laws of motion
- Newtonian dynamics
- Newton's method in optimization
- Gauss–Newton algorithm
- Newton's rings
- Newton's theorem about ovals
- Newton–Pepys problem
- Newtonian potential
- Newtonian fluid
- Classical mechanics
- Corpuscular theory of light
- Leibniz–Newton calculus controversy
- Newton's notation
- Rotating spheres
- Newton's cannonball
- Newton–Cotes formulas
- Newton's method
- Newton fractal
- Newton's identities
- Newton polynomial
- Newton's theorem of revolving orbits
- Newton–Euler equations
- Newton number
- Newton's quotient
- Parallelogram of force
- Newton–Puiseux theorem
- Absolute space and time
- Luminiferous aether
- Newtonian series
- Catherine Barton (niece)
- John Conduitt (nephew-in-law)
- Isaac Barrow (professor)
- William Clarke (mentor)
- Benjamin Pulleyn (tutor)
- Roger Cotes (student)
- William Whiston (student)
- John Keill (disciple)
- William Stukeley (friend)
- William Jones (friend)
- Abraham de Moivre (friend)
- Newton by Blake (monotype)
- Newton by Paolozzi (sculpture)
- Isaac Newton Gargoyle
- Astronomers Monument
- Newton (unit)
- Newton's cradle
- Isaac Newton Institute
- Isaac Newton Medal
- Isaac Newton Telescope
- Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes
- XMM-Newton
- Sir Isaac Newton Sixth Form
- Statal Institute of Higher Education Isaac Newton
- Newton International Fellowship