University of Cambridge

Study at Cambridge

About the university, research at cambridge.

  • Undergraduate courses
  • Events and open days
  • Fees and finance
  • Postgraduate courses
  • How to apply
  • Postgraduate events
  • Fees and funding
  • International students
  • Continuing education
  • Executive and professional education
  • Courses in education
  • How the University and Colleges work
  • Term dates and calendars
  • Visiting the University
  • Annual reports
  • Equality and diversity
  • A global university
  • Public engagement
  • Give to Cambridge
  • For Cambridge students
  • For our researchers
  • Business and enterprise
  • Colleges & departments
  • Email & phone search
  • Museums & collections
  • Studying Physics
  • Department of Physics
  • About overview
  • Our History
  • Cavendish Women in Physics
  • Cavendish Digital Photo Archive and requests to film in the Laboratory
  • Image Request Form
  • Cavendish Ambassador Programme
  • News overview
  • People doing Physics podcast
  • Ray Dolby Centre overview
  • Residents' Newsletters
  • Ray Dolby & Cavendish Laboratory
  • Progress Updates
  • Research Themes overview
  • Astrophysics
  • Physics of Life
  • Energy Materials
  • Physics of Soft Matter and NanoSystems
  • High Energy Physics
  • Applied Quantum Physics and Devices
  • Theory of Condensed Matter
  • Research Programmes overview
  • The Centre for Scientific Computing Collaboration
  • Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability
  • Physics of Medicine
  • Collaborative Programmes overview
  • Cambridge Nuclear Energy Centre
  • Computational Radiotherapy Collaborations
  • The Cavendish-Hitachi Collaboration
  • The Cavendish-Toshiba Collaboration overview
  • Toshiba website
  • Research Services overview
  • Knowledge Exchange overview
  • KE for Cavendish Researchers
  • Cavendish KE working lunch series
  • Advanced Materials Characterisation Suite overview
  • Publications
  • Measurement Techniques and Instrument Technical Literature overview
  • Remnant Fields in Superconducting Magnets
  • PPMS DynaCool System and Options User Manuals
  • Quantum Design MPMS3 SQUID-VSM and Options User Manuals
  • Sample Geometry and the Accuracy of Reported Sample Magnetic Moment
  • Talks, seminars and events overview
  • Cavendish Quantum Colloquium
  • Studying Physics overview
  • Prospective Undergraduates
  • Current Undergraduates overview
  • QAA reviews & accreditation
  • Current courses overview
  • Course Overview : Part IA
  • Course Overview : Part IB
  • Course Overview : Part II
  • Course Overview : Part III
  • Examinations
  • Prospective Postgraduate overview
  • Application Process
  • English Proficiency
  • PhD in Physics
  • PhD in Interdisciplinary Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
  • Sustainable Energy Materials Innovations PhD
  • PhD in Computational Methods for Materials Science 
  • PhD in 2D Materials of Tomorrow
  • EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Superconductivity
  • MPhil in Physics
  • MPhil in Data Intensive Science
  • MPhil in Scientific Computing
  • MASt in Physics (9 months)
  • MPhil Programme in Advanced Materials for the Energy Transition
  • MPhil in Planetary Science and Life in the Universe
  • Postgraduate Student Prizes
  • Coronavirus Postgraduate Signposting
  • People overview
  • Principal Investigators
  • Emeritus Staff and Academic Alumni
  • Academic Teaching Staff
  • Professional Services
  • Jobs overview
  • Apprenticeships
  • Intranet overview
  • Living with Communicable Diseases including Covid-19

Postgraduate Admissions

  • Ray Dolby Centre

students inside the lab

As a postgraduate student at the Cavendish laboratory you would be joining an institution with an illustrious history of innovation and discovery and a current programme that builds on that tradition.

Postgraduate Students in the Department study for one of the following qualifications:

  • Master of Advanced Studies (MASt in Physics) , 9 Months
  • MPhil in Data Intensive Science ,10 Months
  • MPhil in Planetary Sciences and Life in the Universe (PSLU) , 10-month
  • MPhil in Physics (by research) , 1 year
  • MPhil in Scientific Computing (taught/research), 1 year
  • PhD in Physics (by research), 3+ years
  • Interdisciplinary PhD in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (NanoDTC)   (initial common training period + research), 3.5+ years
  • PhD in Computational Methods for Materials Science - 4 year

Applications for admissions

If you decide to make an application, you are advised to do so as early as possible. This will increase your chances not only of acceptance but also of being considered for funding. 

All candidates should consult the course directory for funding deadlines

We hope that the above information is helpful as we wish to encourage good applicants. Should you choose to apply, we will try to reach a decision in the Department without undue delay before passing on your papers for further consideration by the Colleges, the Degree Committee, and the Postgraduate Admissions Office. You should not take any steps to come to Cambridge before you receive an admission letter from the Postgraduate Admissions Office stating that you have satisfied all conditions.

  • The Application Process

Other Useful links

  • Research Interests of the Department
  • Winton Programme

Postgraduate Open Days 

Virtual Postgraduate Open Days takes place every year. During the Open Day you can find out more about what it is like to be a Cavendish postgraduate, various research areas, the application process, student life and more. You will also get an opportunity to attend a Q&A session with the current staff.

This year the Postgraduate Open Day will take place between 4 th and 15 th November 2024.  You can find more information here.

Cavendish Laboratory

19 J J Thomson Avenue

Cambridge CB3 0HE

Tel: +44 1223 337200

Email: [email protected]

Site Privacy & Cookie Policies

Privacy notice for our emails to you, social media.

© 2024 University of Cambridge

  • Contact the University
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Privacy policy and cookies
  • Statement on Modern Slavery
  • Terms and conditions
  • University A-Z
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • Research news
  • About research at Cambridge
  • Spotlight on...

University of Cambridge

Study at Cambridge

About the university, research at cambridge.

  • Undergraduate courses
  • Events and open days
  • Fees and finance
  • Postgraduate courses
  • How to apply
  • Postgraduate events
  • Fees and funding
  • International students
  • Continuing education
  • Executive and professional education
  • Courses in education
  • How the University and Colleges work
  • Term dates and calendars
  • Visiting the University
  • Annual reports
  • Equality and diversity
  • A global university
  • Public engagement
  • Give to Cambridge
  • For Cambridge students
  • For our researchers
  • Business and enterprise
  • Colleges & departments
  • Email & phone search
  • Museums & collections
  • Course Directory
  • Department directory

Department of Physics

Postgraduate Study

  • Why Cambridge overview
  • Chat with our students
  • Cambridge explained overview
  • The supervision system
  • Student life overview
  • In and around Cambridge
  • Leisure activities
  • Student union
  • Music awards
  • Student support overview
  • Mental health and wellbeing
  • Disabled students
  • Language tuition
  • Skills training
  • Support for refugees
  • Courses overview
  • Qualification types
  • Funded studentships
  • Part-time study
  • Research degrees
  • Visiting students
  • Finance overview
  • Fees overview
  • What is my fee status?
  • Part-time fees
  • Application fee
  • Living costs
  • Funding overview
  • Applying for University funding
  • Doctoral training programmes
  • External funding and loans
  • Colleges overview
  • College listing overview
  • Accommodation
  • Applying overview
  • Application deadlines
  • Entry requirements
  • International qualifications
  • English language requirements
  • Find a supervisor
  • Widening access and participation
  • Supporting documents overview
  • Writing a research proposal
  • Preparing a personal statement
  • Application fee overview
  • Application fee waiver
  • International applications
  • Disabled applicants
  • AI and postgraduate applications
  • Admissions fraud
  • How we assess your application
  • Outcome of your application overview
  • Appeals and complaints
  • Your offer overview
  • Visas and immigration
  • Declaring criminal convictions
  • Defer your application
  • Prepare to arrive
  • Track your application
  • International overview
  • International events
  • International student views overview
  • Akhila’s story
  • Alex’s story
  • Huijie’s story
  • Kelsey’s story
  • Nilesh’s story
  • Get in touch!
  • Events overview
  • Upcoming events
  • Postgraduate Open Days overview
  • Discover Cambridge webinars
  • Virtual tour
  • Research Internships
  • How we use participant data
  • Postgraduate Newsletter

About the Department of Physics

The Department of Physics, or the Cavendish Laboratory as it is widely known, has a long history of world leading research and teaching. The Cavendish is home to approximately 430 graduate students  and admits students to six different programmes although the  the majority are studying for a PhD in one of the 14  research groups . 

Our seven research themes span the full range of research activities being carried out in the Laboratory and reflect national research priorities. Many themes cover the work of more than one research group, encouraging new associations and cross-disciplinary collaboration. While the core of our research programme is in experimental physics, essential theoretical support is provided by theorists embedded within the astrophysics and high energy physics research groups, while the condensed matter theory group are strongly cross-disciplinary and contribute to most of the themes.

9 courses offered in the Department of Physics

Computational methods for materials science cdt - mphil + phd.

The development of new materials lies at the heart of many of the technological challenges we currently face, for example creating advanced materials for energy generation. Computational modelling plays an increasingly important role in the understanding, development and optimisation of new materials.

This four-year doctoral training programme on computational methods for material modelling aims to train scientists not only in the use of existing modelling methods but also in the underlying computational and mathematical techniques. This will allow students to develop and enhance existing methods, for instance by introducing new capabilities and functionalities, and also to create innovative new software tools for materials modelling in industrial and academic research.

The first year of the doctoral training programme is provided by the existing MPhil course in Scientific Computing, which has research and taught elements, as well as additional training elements. The final three years consist of a PhD research project, with a student-led choice of projects offered by researchers closely associated with the CDT. ( https://ljc.group.cam.ac.uk ) 

More Information

Data Intensive Science - MPhil

The MPhil in Data Intensive Science is a 10-month cross-departmental programme in the School of the Physical Sciences which aims to provide education of the highest quality at the master’s level. The programme covers the full range of skills required for modern data-driven science. The course covers material from the fields of machine learning and AI, statistical data analysis, research and high performance computing, and the application of these topics to scientific research frontiers; primarily in Astronomy, Cosmology and Particle Physics.

The course structure has been designed in collaboration with our leading researchers and industrial partners to provide students with the theoretical knowledge, practical experience, and transferable skills required to undertake world-leading data-intensive scientific research. Students will gain the broad set of skills required for scientific data analysis, covering traditional statistical techniques as well as modern machine learning approaches.  Both the theoretical underpinnings and practical implementation of these techniques will be taught, with the later aspect including training on software development best practice and the principles of Open Science. The course also aims to provide students with direct experience applying these methods to current research problems in specific scientific fields. Students who have completed the course will be equipped to undertake research on data-intensive scientific projects. Beyond academic disciplines, students will be well prepared for a career as a data science professional in a broad range of commercial sectors.

This course will equip students with all the skills required for modern scientific data analysis, enabling them to participate in large experimental or observational programmes using the latest statistical and machine learning tools deployed on leading-edge computer architectures. These computational and statistical skills will also be directly applicable to data-driven problem-solving in industry.

Interdisciplinary Nanoscience and Nanotechnology - PhD

The vision of this PhD programme is to deliver bespoke cohort-based interdisciplinary training that promotes holistic problem-focused thinking for nanoscientists, drives new scientific directions, and impactful and responsible translation of research to technologies. A particular emphasis will be exposure to a broad range of world-class research environments to allow students to discover their individual research and technology interests and develop strong ownership of their PhD topic.

The first six months of the programme will provide advanced-level training, specifically designed for students, through an integrated lectures + practicals module on Applied Nanoscience, a module on System Integration for Experimentalists and one short and one longer experimental project prior to the final selection of an interdisciplinary PhD research project between two research groups in the Departments of Physics, Chemistry, Engineering, Materials Science or another relevant department within the University. An additional module on Innovation for Scientists will help students develop a wider perspective, including training on innovation, sustainability and responsible research.

Throughout the programme, there will be an environment that supports creativity, resilience, peer-to-peer learning, networking, and connectivity. The programme will offer professional skills training to support students on different career paths in industry, academia, and beyond, and it will help students discover and nurture their leadership approach in varied contexts. Cross-cohort events will include student-led conferences, research seminars, onsite and offsite research, career development workshops led by internal and external experts, and other activities.

Physics - MASt

The MASt in Physics is a taught master's-level course in which students who applied from outside the University of Cambridge work alongside students taking the final year of the integrated undergraduate-and-master's course in Physics. This year is designed for students who wish to pursue a professional career in physics, (in academic or industrial research) and who are already familiar with the physics covered in a typical three-year UK bachelor's physics programme.

MASt students study alongside the fourth-year students taking the physics part of the integrated Cambridge Natural Science course, commonly referred to as Part III physics. Details of the current Part III physics course can be found on the Department of Physics website.

The MASt in Physics should not be confused with the MASt courses in Mathematics and in Astrophysics, each of which provides an alternative taught master's course with physics components.

Physics - MPhil

The MPhil is offered by the Department of Physics as a full-time period of research and introduces students to research skills and specialist knowledge. Students are integrated into the research culture of the Department by joining a research group. They are expected to attend the Department’s programme of research seminars and other postgraduate courses but most research training is provided within the group structure and overseen by their supervisor.

Physics - PhD

The PhD in Physics is a full-time period of research that introduces or builds upon research skills and specialist knowledge. Applications for part-time study may also be considered, but attendance requirements need to be fulfilled. Students are assigned to a research Supervisor, a specialist in part or all of the student's chosen research field, and join a research group which might vary in size between a handful to many tens of individuals. Details of the various research groups can be found on the Research Groups page on the Department of Physics website.

Scientific Computing - MPhil

The MPhil programme in Scientific Computing provides world-class education on high performance computing and advanced algorithms for numerical simulation at continuum and atomic-scale levels. The course trains early-career scientists in the use of existing computational software and in the underlying components of the simulation pipeline, from mathematical models of physical systems and advanced numerical algorithms for their discretisation, to object-oriented programming and methods for high-performance computing for deployment in contemporary massively parallel computers.  As a result, course graduates have rigorous research skills and are formidably well-equipped to proceed to doctoral research or directly into employment. The highly transferable skills in algorithm development and high-performance computing make our graduates extremely employable in all sectors of industry, commerce and finance.

The MPhil in Scientific Computing is suitable for graduates from any discipline of natural sciences, technology or engineering, who have good mathematical and computational skills.  

Superconductivity: Enabling Transformative Technologies EPSRC CDT - PhD

This PhD course is part of the Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) programme in Superconductivity: Enabling Transformative Technologies led by the University of Bristol.

The CDT will create a step change in superconductivity training in the UK by using a cohort-based approach to provide a diverse new generation of researchers with the interdisciplinary and teamwork skills required to develop transformative technologies needed to engineer Net-Zero, advance healthcare, and deliver novel quantum devices.

Bringing together the universities of Bristol, Oxford, and Cambridge, the CDT will deliver comprehensive graduate training across their Physics, Materials Science, Engineering, and Chemistry departments.

The programme will be co-delivered with partners encompassing industry, research facilities, and the educational sector. The CDT will serve as a vibrant hub for the wider UK superconductivity community, with the added value of providing training and networking opportunities to those outside of the CDT.

Sustainable Energy Materials Innovation - PhD

The Sustainable Energy Materials Innovation PhD course at the University of Cambridge will provide diverse training in the design and discovery, development, scale-up, life-cycle analysis, and systems integration of advanced energy materials and devices in areas strongly guided by the needs of the ‘net-zero’ industry. It will train the future leaders needed for a rapid transition to a zero-carbon society and make transformational, incremental, and disruptive materials discoveries facilitating the energy transition.

6 courses also advertised in the Department of Physics

2d materials of tomorrow epsrc cdt - phd.

From the Department of Engineering

Advanced Materials for the Energy Transition - MPhil

From the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy

The MPhil in Advanced Materials for the Energy Transition is an 11-month Master's Programme that is designed to deliver outstanding postgraduate level training in the sciences related to the development of new materials for low-carbon energy technologies.

Global warming and energy challenges are putting strong constraints on our society and will lead to major economic and societal changes in the future. To overcome these challenges and promote a sustainable modern society, it is necessary to develop new technologies with minimum environmental impact for example with low energy consumption and low carbon production.

The development of these energy-materials-based new technologies necessitates an interdisciplinary expertise in scientific and technological domains such as Physics, Chemistry, and Materials Science. This interdisciplinary training is necessary to understand and model new materials properties, find ways to synthesize them, and develop new zero-carbon energy technologies.

The Master's level degree responds to this demand and it is shaped to address it. It combines core elements with general and specialised training with a strong research project element. The training will combine different scientific disciplines.

Biological Sciences - PhD

From the School of the Biological Sciences

The Cambridge Biosciences DTP is a four year fully-funded PhD programme that aims to create highly skilled and employable people. The programme offers training across 23 University Departments/Institutes and 3 Partner Institutes providing access to a wide range of research areas related to the strategic themes of the BBSRC. We offer three types of DTP studentships:

  • DTP Standard

During the programme, DTP Standard and Targeted students will undertake two ten-week rotations in different labs before commencing their PhD. They will receive training in a variety of areas including but not limited to statistics, programming, ethics, data analysis, scientific writing and public engagement. Students will also undertake a 12-week internship (PIPS).

iCase students are not required to undertake rotations but may do so if they feel that this training would be useful. They must undertake a placement with their Industrial Partner for a minimum of three months and a maximum of 18 months.

Students will be expected to submit their thesis at the end of the fourth year.

Part-time study, whilst not the norm, may be viable, depending on the project, and will be considered on a case by case basis so please discuss this option with your proposed supervisor before making an application for this mode of study.

Developing National Capability for Materials 4.0 EPSRC CDT - PhD

This PhD course is part of the EPSRC Centre of Doctoral Training (CDT) in Developing National Capability for Materials 4.0 led by the University of Manchester.

Success in achieving net zero, delivering a healthy nation and driving increased national resilience and productivity, will be critically reliant on novel materials and devices. This demands rapid delivery, but it typically takes up to 20 years to bring new materials to commercial use. To move faster we need scientists and engineers able to exploit new developments in high-throughput approaches to making, characterising and testing new materials, and able to deploy materials modelling and materials informatics to generate and exploit materials data. We need to digitalise the materials innovation process to accelerate development, certification and deployment of new materials, and materials systems. We need researchers adept at working across interfaces between machine learning, informatics, physical and cyber systems and modelling, learning from advances in other disciplines and breaking silos. In other words, we need graduates proficient in ‘Materials 4.0’.

The goal of this PhD program is to develop leaders in the field of Materials 4.0 and ambassadors for a broader cultural shift in the practice of materials science. Working across boundaries between fields, the students will develop and advocate for new capabilities (methods and techniques) to drive forward the digitalisation of materials research and innovation.

The CDT will develop the necessary skills in a significant number of new scientists, but our ambition is to build an even broader skills base for UK academia and industry. The training programme is therefore designed to take our students from learners to leaders over the course of the programme. The students will begin by learning core skills, but as they develop proficiency and confidence they will play a role in training others, within and external to the CDT. Their research projects will focus on developing new methods and tools within Materials 4.0 and in their last two years the students will take the lead in developing training materials for these new methods, delivering training and disseminating the new capability.

By training a new generation of researchers in the digitalisation of materials science, the CDT will provide the skilled recruits that UK industry and academia need to shorten time to market, improve productivity and resilience and maintain industrial competitiveness. Moreover, through the innovative delivery mechanism of our national CDT bringing together the strengths of three national institutes, we will drive broad culture change, disseminating skills across industry and academia, making Materials 4.0 a ubiquitous way of doing materials science.

Micro and Nanotechnology Enterprise - MPhil

The MPhil in Micro and Nanotechnology Enterprise is an exciting opportunity in which world-leading scientists and successful entrepreneurs are brought together to deliver a one-year master’s degree combining an in-depth multidisciplinary scientific programme with a global perspective on the commercial opportunities and business practice necessary for the successful exploitation in the rapidly developing fields of nanotechnology and nanomanufacturing.

The programme is intended for those with a good first degree in the physical sciences and relevant areas of engineering, who wish to develop research skills and commercial awareness of the cutting-edge disciplines of micro- and nanotechnology. The course will provide an unparalleled educational experience for entrepreneurs in these fields.

Planetary Science and Life in the Universe - MPhil

From the Institute of Astronomy

The MPhil in Planetary Sciences and Life in the Universe is a 10-month cross-departmental programme delivering outstanding postgraduate level training in the search for life’s origins on Earth and its discovery on planets beyond Earth.

The course structure has been designed by leading scientists to provide students with the theoretical knowledge, practical experience, and transferable skills required to undertake world-leading research in Planetary Sciences and Life in the Universe. Graduating students will be equipped with the discipline specific-specialisations and skills of a masters course, whilst gaining understanding in how the core areas that bridge PSLU fields form the cross-disciplinary foundation of this exciting new frontier.

Graduates of the course will gain valuable skills rooted in the study of the physics, chemistry, mathematics, and biology of planetary science and life in the universe. Transferrable skills training is delivered through the three group-based projects running over the year: these provide a unique opportunity for students to gain experience of leadership, collaboration, and written and oral communication.  The training provided will be an outstanding foundation for PhD research in planetary science, exoplanetary science, Earth system science, planetary astrophysics, astrobiology and allied disciplines, or for the wide range of careers where analytical skills, excellent communication, and experience of leading collaborations are key.

Department Members

Professor mete atature head of department, professor ulrich keyser deputy head of department (education).

  • 60 Academic Staff
  • 160 Postdoctoral Researchers
  • 430 Graduate Students
  • 450 Undergraduates

http://www.phy.cam.ac.uk/

Research areas.

  • Astrophysics
  • High Energy Physics
  • Atomic, Mesoscopic and Optical Physics (AMOP)
  • Biological and Soft Systems (BSS)
  • Microelectronics (ME)
  • NanoPhotonics (NP)
  • Optoelectronics (OE)
  • Quantum Matter (QM)
  • Scientific Computing (LSC)
  • Semiconductor Physics (SP)
  • Molecular Engineering (MolE)
  • Surfaces, Microstructure and Fracture (SMF)
  • Theory of Condensed Matter (TCM)
  • Thin Films Magnetism (TFM)

Postgraduate Admissions Office

  • Admissions statistics
  • Start an application
  • Applicant Self-Service

At a glance

  • Bringing a family
  • Current Postgraduates
  • Cambridge Students' Union (SU)

University Policy and Guidelines

Privacy Policy

Information compliance

Equality and Diversity

Terms of Study

About this site

About our website

Privacy policy

© 2024 University of Cambridge

  • Contact the University
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Privacy policy and cookies
  • Statement on Modern Slavery
  • Terms and conditions
  • University A-Z
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • Research news
  • About research at Cambridge
  • Spotlight on...

Our cookies

We use cookies for three reasons: to give you the best experience on PGS, to make sure the PGS ads you see on other sites are relevant , and to measure website usage. Some of these cookies are necessary to help the site work properly and can’t be switched off. Cookies also support us to provide our services for free, and by click on “Accept” below, you are agreeing to our use of cookies .You can manage your preferences now or at any time.

Privacy overview

We use cookies, which are small text files placed on your computer, to allow the site to work for you, improve your user experience, to provide us with information about how our site is used, and to deliver personalised ads which help fund our work and deliver our service to you for free.

The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can give you a more personalised web experience.

You can accept all, or else manage cookies individually. However, blocking some types of cookies may affect your experience of the site and the services we are able to offer.

You can change your cookies preference at any time by visiting our Cookies Notice page. Please remember to clear your browsing data and cookies when you change your cookies preferences. This will remove all cookies previously placed on your browser.

For more detailed information about the cookies we use, or how to clear your browser cookies data see our Cookies Notice

Manage consent preferences

Strictly necessary cookies

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems.

They are essential for you to browse the website and use its features.

You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. We can’t identify you from these cookies.

Functional cookies

These help us personalise our sites for you by remembering your preferences and settings. They may be set by us or by third party providers, whose services we have added to our pages. If you do not allow these cookies, then these services may not function properly.

Performance cookies

These cookies allow us to count visits and see where our traffic comes from, so we can measure and improve the performance of our site. They help us to know which pages are popular and see how visitors move around the site. The cookies cannot directly identify any individual users.

If you do not allow these cookies we will not know when you have visited our site and will not be able to improve its performance for you.

Marketing cookies

These cookies may be set through our site by social media services or our advertising partners. Social media cookies enable you to share our content with your friends and networks. They can track your browser across other sites and build up a profile of your interests. If you do not allow these cookies you may not be able to see or use the content sharing tools.

Advertising cookies may be used to build a profile of your interests and show you relevant adverts on other sites. They do not store directly personal information, but work by uniquely identifying your browser and internet device. If you do not allow these cookies, you will still see ads, but they won’t be tailored to your interests.

PhD in Physics

University of cambridge, different course options.

  • Key information

Course Summary

Tuition fees, entry requirements, similar courses at different universities, key information data source : idp connect, qualification type.

PhD/DPhil - Doctor of Philosophy

Subject areas

Physics (General)

Course type

The PhD in Physics is a full-time period of research which introduces or builds upon, research skills and specialist knowledge. Students are assigned to a research supervisor, a specialist in part or all of the student's chosen research field, and join a research group which might vary in size between a handful to many tens of individuals.

Although the supervisor is responsible for the progress of a student's research programme, the extent to which a postgraduate student is assisted by the supervisor or by other members of the group depends almost entirely on the structure and character of the group concerned. The research field is normally determined at entry, after consideration of the student's interests and facilities available. The student, however, may work within a given field for a period of time before his or her personal topic is determined.

By the end of the research programme, students will have demonstrated:

  • the creation and interpretation of new knowledge, through original research or other advanced scholarship, of a quality to satisfy peer review, extend the forefront of the discipline, and merit publication;
  • a systematic acquisition and understanding of a substantial body of knowledge which is at the forefront of an academic discipline or area of professional practice;
  • the general ability to conceptualise, design and implement a project for the generation of new knowledge, applications or understanding at the forefront of the discipline, and to adjust the project design in the light of unforeseen problems;
  • a detailed understanding of applicable techniques for research and advanced academic enquiry; and
  • the development of a PhD thesis for examination that they can defend in an oral examination and, if successful, graduate with a PhD.

UK fees Course fees for UK students

For this course (per year)

International fees Course fees for EU and international students

Applicants for this course should have achieved a UK Masters (Pass). The Faculty Board of Physics and Chemistry normally requires applicants to have achieved the equivalent of a UK master's (pass). This requirement is in addition to satisfying the University minimum academic requirement. Applicants should obtain the equivalent of: at least a 2.1 in a UK four-year "integrated master's" (honours) degree, OR at least a II. in a UK three-year bachelor's (honours) degree plus a relevant one/two-year UK master's degree.

Secondary Education (Physics) PGCE

Liverpool hope university, iqts secondary physics (11-16), bristol, university of the west of england, msc physics, nottingham trent university, mres physics, pgce secondary education (physics).

University of Cambridge

Study at Cambridge

About the university, research at cambridge.

  • Undergraduate courses
  • Events and open days
  • Fees and finance
  • Postgraduate courses
  • How to apply
  • Postgraduate events
  • Fees and funding
  • International students
  • Continuing education
  • Executive and professional education
  • Courses in education
  • How the University and Colleges work
  • Term dates and calendars
  • Visiting the University
  • Annual reports
  • Equality and diversity
  • A global university
  • Public engagement
  • Give to Cambridge
  • For Cambridge students
  • For our researchers
  • Business and enterprise
  • Colleges & departments
  • Email & phone search
  • Museums & collections
  • Current students

Degree Committee for the Faculty of Physics & Chemistry

  • About the DC overview
  • Meeting dates
  • Department Contacts
  • Prospective students overview
  • Continuing students
  • Current students overview
  • Change in student status overview
  • Changing course, dept or mode
  • Extending submission deadline
  • Intermission
  • Withdrawal and reinstatement
  • Working Away from Cambridge
  • Supervision reports
  • First year review overview
  • Exams MPhil (taught) overview
  • Rules and Regulations
  • After the examination
  • Exams MPhil by thesis overview
  • Before you submit
  • Thesis submission
  • The oral (viva)
  • Results overview
  • Corrections
  • Revising a thesis
  • Exams PhD overview
  • Submitting a hardbound copy
  • PhD not awarded
  • LWA Research Fund
  • Complaints and appeals
  • Supervisors overview
  • Supervisor appointment
  • Roles and responsibilities overview
  • Supervisor role: postgraduate admissions
  • Supervisor role: current students
  • Supervisor role: probationary review
  • Supervisor role: examinations
  • Guidance for supervisors
  • Supervision reporting
  • Examiners overview
  • First Year Assessment
  • PhD or MPhil by thesis exam overview
  • Examiner appointment
  • Pre-viva actions
  • Post-viva actions
  • Submitting reports
  • Fee and expenses
  • Examining a revised thesis
  • MRes or MPhil (taught) exam overview
  • Examiner Appointment
  • Senior/Chair of Examiners
  • External Examiner for taught courses
  • Examiners and Assessors
  • Fees and expenses
  • Plagiarism or poor scholarship
  • Appeals procedures
  • Higher Degrees overview
  • PhD under Special Regulations
  • ScD and LittD

PhD examination

  • Degree Committee for the Faculty of Physics & Chemistry
  • Change in student status
  • First year review
  • Exams MPhil (taught)
  • Exams MPhil by thesis

What is a PhD?

There is a wealth of useful information on the nature of the PhD, thesis submission and the examination process on the  Cambridge Students website. You are strongly advised to read this material in advance of writing up and submitting your thesis .

A thesis must be a connected account of research written by the candidate. It must not simply consist of a collection of unconnected or unrelated papers published or otherwise. However, it may include published or publishable work provided it is part of a connected argument and is uniform in presentation and format with the remainder of the thesis. It may also include appendices which are relevant to the material contained in the thesis but do not form part of the connected argument. Remember , the examiners must be left in no doubt as to which parts of your submitted work are your own original work and which are not.

Before recommending award of the PhD Degree the examiners must satisfy themselves that the thesis:

  • represents a significant contribution to the field of study through the creation and interpretation of new knowledge, the connection of previously unrelated facts, the development of new theory, or the revision of older views;
  • is of a quality in whole or in part of a standard to merit publication (whether or not subsequently published);
  • provides evidence of the acquisition of knowledge and a detailed understanding of applicable techniques for research and advanced academic enquiry;
  • is clearly written;
  • takes due account of previously published work on the subject;
  • is of a quality and quantity to reflect what it is reasonable to expect a student to complete within three years full-time (five years part-time) research.

The limitations implied by this advice are intended to apply to the scale and scope of the work presented in the thesis but not to its quality.

If you can't find the page you are looking for or find a broken link do let us know (please use the email link in the 'Contact us' section below).

Ukraine - University resources

Coronavirus advice from the University

Office closures

The Degree Committee for the Faculty of Physics & Chemistry will be closed from 5pm on Thursday 28 March 2024 and will reopen again on Tuesday 2 April 2024. Research degree theses should still be submitted by your submission deadline even if that falls over the holiday period.

Meetings schedule

Meetings of the Degree Committee and Degree Ceremonies

Essential Links

Cambridge Students portal

Code of Practice for Postgraduate Students

International Students Office

Student Registry (for staff)

Degree Committee for Physics & Chemistry, School of Physical Sciences, 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge, CB2 1RX. Tel: 01223 746764 / 746766

[email protected]

Site privacy & cookie policies.

© 2024 University of Cambridge

  • Contact the University
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Privacy policy and cookies
  • Statement on Modern Slavery
  • Terms and conditions
  • University A-Z
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • Research news
  • About research at Cambridge
  • Spotlight on...

IMAGES

  1. Guidelines for Physics Doctoral Candidates » MIT Physics

    cambridge phd physics requirements

  2. PhD meaning and its tale

    cambridge phd physics requirements

  3. A week as a Cambridge PhD student

    cambridge phd physics requirements

  4. Online Cambridge International A-Level Physics

    cambridge phd physics requirements

  5. PhD

    cambridge phd physics requirements

  6. Best Doctors of Philosophy (PhD) Programs in Natural Sciences Physics 2024

    cambridge phd physics requirements

VIDEO

  1. A week as a Cambridge PhD student

  2. DU PHD PHYSICS Previous Year Papers Solution

  3. TIFR PHD physics 2024 solution#emt#TIFR#csirnet physics

  4. PhD (Physics) entrance test2024

  5. Studying Physics Everyday Until I Get a PhD

  6. Before Class 11th ,I Will Do PHD in Physics 😂😂 But Now I Am 12th Pass 🤣 #science #neet #jee

COMMENTS

  1. PhD in Physics | Postgraduate Study - University of Cambridge

    Requirements. Finance. How To Apply. The PhD in Physics is a full-time period of research that introduces or builds upon research skills and specialist knowledge.

  2. PhD in Physics | Department of Physics - University of Cambridge

    Full-time students must spend at least three terms of residence in Cambridge and nine terms of research. If you are undertaking a placement or internship away from Cambridge for more than two weeks you need to apply for leave to work away.

  3. Application Process | Department of Physics

    Applying to the Department of Physics Graduate programmes. Below are steps to help with you application process. First please read the detailed webpages of the course you are interested in applying for. These can be found here – https://www.phy.cam.ac.uk/students/prospective-postgraduate.

  4. Rules and Regulations for PhD - University of Cambridge

    All PhDs are subject to the General Regulations for the PhD degree to be found in the Statutes & Ordinances of the University (Ordinances, Chapter VII). Word limits must be strictly observed: Institute of Astronomy, Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy, Department of Physics PhD: The thesis is not to exceed, without prior permission of ...

  5. Postgraduate Admissions | Department of Physics

    Postgraduate Students in the Department study for one of the following qualifications: Master of Advanced Studies (MASt in Physics), 9 Months. MPhil in Data Intensive Science,10 Months. MPhil in Planetary Sciences and Life in the Universe (PSLU), 10-month. MPhil in Physics (by research), 1 year.

  6. PhD in Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics

    Prerequisites. Many students in DAMTP are admitted after taking the Cambridge Part III (MMath/MASt) course and others will have completed a comparable Master-level course. Some may already have carried out a small-scale research project.

  7. Department of Physics | Postgraduate Study

    The PhD in Physics is a full-time period of research that introduces or builds upon research skills and specialist knowledge. Applications for part-time study may also be considered, but attendance requirements need to be fulfilled.

  8. PhD in Physics at University of Cambridge - Postgraduate Search

    Entry requirements. Applicants for this course should have achieved a UK Masters (Pass). The Faculty Board of Physics and Chemistry normally requires applicants to have achieved the equivalent of a UK master's (pass). This requirement is in addition to satisfying the University minimum academic requirement.

  9. PhD examination | Degree Committee for the Faculty of Physics ...

    There is a wealth of useful information on the nature of the PhD, thesis submission and the examination process on the Cambridge Students website. You are strongly advised to read this material in advance of writing up and submitting your thesis.

  10. PhD in Physics 48 months PHD Program By University of ...

    Learn more about PhD in Physics 48 months PHD Program By University of Cambridge including the program fees, scholarships, scores and further course information