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MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Electrical Energy Conversion Systems are integrated networks of power electronic converters, electrical machines, actuators, energy storage devices, and control systems. As a result of recent advances in power electronics technology, these systems are becoming commonplace and can be found in more-electric aircraft and ships, electric vehicles, railway systems, renewable power generation, active management of power distribution systems, automation systems for factories and industrial processes.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Control Engineering is a multi-disciplinary subject, with applications across a wide range of industrial sectors. The Control Systems Group in the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering at the University of Manchester has been running an MSc Programme in Advanced Control and Systems Engineering since 1968.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
This MSc will provide you with a thorough, methodical and wide-ranging education in digital signal and image processing. It has a rigorous mathematical and engineering framework for the discipline, and additionally considers how the technologies are deployed and the areas, that most benefit from its exploitation.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
This programme provides an up-to-date view of communication and telecommunication engineering from a systems level through to implementation using Microwave, Optical and Semi-Conductor Devices. Emphasis is placed on mobile communications, networks and wireless technologies.
MPhil / PhD
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
The School has six research groups which reflect our vision of Electrical and Electronic Engineering. Our research groups are as follows: Microwave and Communication Systems (MACS) The MACS group considers a wide range of advanced topics applicable to communications and radar; from highly mobile wireless networks, propagation, microwave and milli-metric components, through to digital signal processing, coding and signal analysis.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Electrical Energy Conversion Systems are integrated networks of power electronic converters, electrical machines, actuators, energy storage devices, and control systems. As a result of recent advances in power electronics technology, these systems are becoming commonplace and can be found in more-electric aircraft and ships, electric vehicles, railway systems, renewable power generation, active management of power distribution systems, automation systems for factories and industrial processes.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Control Engineering is a multi-disciplinary subject, with applications across a wide range of industrial sectors. The Control Systems Group in the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering at the University of Manchester has been running an MSc Programme in Advanced Control and Systems Engineering since 1968.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
This MSc will provide you with a thorough, methodical and wide-ranging education in digital signal and image processing. It has a rigorous mathematical and engineering framework for the discipline, and additionally considers how the technologies are deployed and the areas, that most benefit from its exploitation.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
This programme provides an up-to-date view of communication and telecommunication engineering from a systems level through to implementation using Microwave, Optical and Semi-Conductor Devices. Emphasis is placed on mobile communications, networks and wireless technologies.
MSc
University of Manchester - School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Power system engineering is about keeping things in balance. Not just the balance between generation and load or between production and consumption of reactive power.
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