Zum Inhalt springen
Technische Universität München
Master Englisch Mathematik, Naturwissenschaften

Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²)

Master

Über das Programm

This two-year European Master's programme in Material Science aims to build up a European platform at university level strongly involving "large scale research facilities". The Master's degree is awarded by two out of the six partner universities: Posnan (PL), Rennes 1 (F), Montpellier (F), Torino (I), Technische Universität München (DE), and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (DE). Admission criteria are a BSc degree (or the equivalent – 180 ECTS) in physics, chemistry, geoscience, or materials science, together with a proficient level of scientific English. This Master's course of study aims to promote the scientific collaboration between universities, large scale facilities, and industry. Its main objective is to provide skilled scientific and technological manpower in materials science in order to increase the contribution and use of large scale facilities both for industrial and fundamental research. Students will obtain wide background knowledge in exploring materials with neutrons or synchrotron radiation during a summer school lasting two weeks. State-of-the-art experimental beamline set-ups of spectrometers and diffractometers at synchrotron sources, nuclear reactors as well as on spallation sources will be introduced for different applications. Students should be able to choose the right source and instrumentation with respect to resolution, time-scale, and energy needed for a given scientific problem. Students will also be asked to write their own proposal and to conduct an experiment at large scale facilities. Several important European large scale facilities, such as FRM II (Munich, Germany), PSI (Switzerland), ESRF and ILL (Grenoble, France), LLB (Saclay, France), and DESY (Hamburg, Germany), strongly support this Master's course of study. They will co-organise the summer school and will host students in the second half of their studies to follow research activities previously agreed between a university professor and scientists from the large scale facilities.
Den originalen englischen Text anzeigen
This two-year European Master's programme in Material Science aims to build up a European platform at university level strongly involving "large scale research facilities". The Master's degree is awarded by two out of the six partner universities: Posnan (PL), Rennes 1 (F), Montpellier (F), Torino (I), Technische Universität München (DE), and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (DE). Admission criteria are a BSc degree (or the equivalent – 180 ECTS) in physics, chemistry, geoscience, or materials science, together with a proficient level of scientific English. This Master's course of study aims to promote the scientific collaboration between universities, large scale facilities, and industry. Its main objective is to provide skilled scientific and technological manpower in materials science in order to increase the contribution and use of large scale facilities both for industrial and fundamental research. Students will obtain wide background knowledge in exploring materials with neutrons or synchrotron radiation during a summer school lasting two weeks. State-of-the-art experimental beamline set-ups of spectrometers and diffractometers at synchrotron sources, nuclear reactors as well as on spallation sources will be introduced for different applications. Students should be able to choose the right source and instrumentation with respect to resolution, time-scale, and energy needed for a given scientific problem. Students will also be asked to write their own proposal and to conduct an experiment at large scale facilities. Several important European large scale facilities, such as FRM II (Munich, Germany), PSI (Switzerland), ESRF and ILL (Grenoble, France), LLB (Saclay, France), and DESY (Hamburg, Germany), strongly support this Master's course of study. They will co-organise the summer school and will host students in the second half of their studies to follow research activities previously agreed between a university professor and scientists from the large scale facilities.

Welche Berufe eröffnet dieses Programm?

Verwandte Berufssuchen aus Daten der Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BERUFENET):

Alle Berufe entdecken →

Fächer / Themenbereiche

Chemistry

Ähnliche Programme

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Kurze Antworten zu Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²) an der Technische Universität München

Wird Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²) an der Technische Universität München auf Deutsch oder Englisch unterrichtet?

Dieser Master Studiengang wird in Englisch unterrichtet. Stelle sicher, dass du die Sprachanforderungen (z.B. TestDaF, DSH, IELTS oder TOEFL) vor der Bewerbung überprüfst.

Wie viel kostet der Studiengang Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²)?

Keine Studiengebühren (nur Semesterbeitrag). Internationale Studierende sollten zusätzlich etwa 800–1000 EUR/Monat für Lebenshaltungskosten in Deutschland einplanen.

Was sind die Zulassungsvoraussetzungen für Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²) an der Technische Universität München?

Typische Anforderungen sind: ein anerkannter Sekundar-/Bachelorabschluss, Nachweis der Sprachkenntnisse (Englisch) und (für Nicht-EU-Bewerber) eine uni-assist Bewerbung plus Finanzierungsnachweis (Sperrkonto ~11.904 EUR/Jahr).

Wann ist die Bewerbungsfrist?

Die Bewerbungsfristen variieren: Das Wintersemester endet in der Regel am 15. Juli, das Sommersemester am 15. Januar. Bestätige die genaue Frist immer auf der offiziellen Universitätswebsite.

Kann ich während des Studiums von Master's in Materials Science Powered by Large Scale Facilities (MaMaSELF²) in Deutschland arbeiten?

Ja. Internationale Studierende dürfen ohne zusätzliche Genehmigung bis zu 140 volle Tage / 280 halbe Tage pro Jahr arbeiten. Nach dem Abschluss kannst du eine 18-monatige Arbeitserlaubnis zur Jobsuche beantragen.

Wie bewerbe ich mich an der Technische Universität München — direkt oder über uni-assist?

Die meisten deutschen Universitäten akzeptieren internationale Bewerbungen zur Dokumentenprüfung über uni-assist. Einige Universitäten akzeptieren Direktbewerbungen — überprüfe die Programmseite auf der offiziellen Website.

Erhalte den wöchentlichen Deutschland-Guide in dein Postfach

Neue Blogbeiträge, Bewerbungsfristen, Stipendienankündigungen. Kein Spam, du kannst dich jederzeit abmelden.

Wöchentlicher Deutschland-Ratgeber — 1–2 E-Mails/Woche, kein Spam.

Wöchentlicher Deutschland-Leitfaden in deinem Posteingang

Kein Spam. Jederzeit abbestellen.