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Aerial image of Harwell Science and Innovation Campus. The Harwell Science and Innovation Campus is a 700-acre science and technology campus in Oxfordshire, England.Over 6,000 people work there in over 240 public and private sector organisations, working across sectors including Space, Clean Energy, Life Sciences and Quantum Computing.
It is located on the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus at Chilton near Didcot in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. It has a staff of approximately 1,200 people who support the work of over 10,000 scientists and engineers, chiefly from the university research community.
The European Centre for Space Applications and Telecommunications or ECSAT is a research centre belonging to the European Space Agency (ESA) and located on the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. It was created in 2009 and moved to its present building in 2013. [1]
The White Hart Shops in Harwell Bus shelter in Wantage Road, Harwell. Harwell contains two 13th-century houses, each of which is a Grade II* listed building. Lime Tree Cottage in the High Street was built about 1250 and remodelled about 1300. A cross-wing was added about 1360 and the house was given a new front about 1700. [9]
Harwell, Nottinghamshire, England, a hamlet; Harwell, Oxfordshire, England, a village RAF Harwell, a World War II RAF airfield, near Harwell village. Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, the current official name of the former RAF Harwell site; Atomic Energy Research Establishment; Harwell Glacier, in Antarctica
Located in southern Oxfordshire, approximately 12 miles south of the city of Oxford and near the A34 dual carriageway, Milton Park is close to Didcot Parkway railway station in an area known as Science Vale UK, which also includes Culham Campus and the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus.
Quantum Detectors is based at the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus [6] close to the city of Oxford in the United Kingdom (UK). The company was founded in 2007 [7] and is privately owned by Diamond Light Source Ltd. and The Science and Technology Facilities council commercial arm, STFC Innovations Ltd.
Oxsensis was a spin out using technology from the Central Microstructure Facility at the STFC’s ( Science and Technology Facilities Council) Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in 2003 by, Oxfordshire entrepreneur, David Gahan. [1] After an initial proof of concept Oxsensis raised £890,000 worth of investment in July 2005 through a funding round ...