- Source: Andy Schofield
- Whitehawk F.C.
- The Callisto Protocol
- Shazam
- Daftar pemain Manchester United F.C.
- The Pirate Bay
- Paus biru
- Sengketa Pedra Branca
- Aktor Terbaik (Penghargaan Satellite)
- Aktor Inggris Tahun Ini (London Film Critics' Circle Award)
- Activision
- Andy Schofield
- Phillip Schofield
- Andrew Schofield
- Norman Fairclough
- Ralph Henstock
- Bob Jessop
- Mark Smith (physicist)
- Chris Bonington
- 1994 Group
- Phil Ineson
Andrew John Schofield (better known as Andy Schofield) is an academic and administrator who is the vice-chancellor of Lancaster University. A theoretical physicist, he was previously a pro-vice-chancellor at the University of Birmingham and head of its College of Engineering and Physical Sciences. As an academic, his research focus is in the theory of correlated quantum systems, in particular non-Fermi liquids, quantum criticality and high-temperature superconductivity.
In September 2024, he was announced as the 51st Principal of the University of Glasgow, and will take up the position in October 2025, taking over from Anton Muscatelli.
Biography
Andy Schofield was educated at Whitgift School before reading Natural Sciences at Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge. In 1993, he obtained his PhD at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge and won a College Research Fellowship at Gonville and Caius. He was a postdoctoral researcher at Rutgers, New Jersey before his return to Cambridge as a Royal Society University Research Fellow. He joined the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Birmingham in 1999, became the head of school in 2010, and was promoted in 2015 to pro-vice-chancellor and head of the College of EPS. In May 2020, Andy became the Vice-Chancellor of Lancaster University.
Awards
The Schuldham Plate (1989), Gonville and Caius.
Maxwell Medal and Prize (2002) for work on the emergent properties of correlated electrons.
Fellow of the Institute of Physics (2002).
References
External links
Staff page at Theoretical Physics Research Group, University of Birmingham