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Study at RSAA
 | Do you have a question about the RSAA Graduate Program? Want to talk to one of our
astronomers or students? Email us at and we will endeavour to get back to you within a working day. |
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The deadline for application for admission and scholarships for
2009 entry is
31 August 2008 for international students and 31 October 2008 for
domestic students.
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- An overview of the Graduate Program in
Astronomy and Astrophysics can be found here.
- Information on scholarships available for study
at RSAA can be found here.
- For information on the Summer Research Scholarship
program please check here.
- For information on the Astrophysics Honours Year
program please check here.
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Did you know?
- RSAA students have been awarded 6 of Australia's 10
Hubble Fellowships, making the RSAA the 2nd most
successful non-US institution (behind Cambridge which has 7) in
these prestigous postdoctoral fellowship competitions.
- RSAA scientists have led the 2dF Galaxy
Redshift Survey, the 6dF Galaxy Survey,
the High-Z SN Search,
the HST Key
Project for measuring the Hubble Constant, and Mount Stromlo
has been the home of the MACHO experiment.
- In 2006, the International
Shaw Prize in astronomy was awarded to an RSAA scientist for
the discovery that the universe is expanding at an accelerating
rate.
- In the 2006/2007 Hubble Space Telescope round,
only two large (more than 100 orbits) "Treasury
Programs" were awarded time, each of which involves
scientific investigators from RSAA.
- RSAA has built Australia's first instruments for the Gemini
8m telescopes (NIFS program, NIFS begins observations in
Hawaii, GSAOI program) and is involved in
instrumentation for ESO's Very Large Telescopes. RSAA
has a PhD program in astronomical instrumentation. We run
telescopes at Siding Spring Observatory, which is the site for the
School's new 1.3m SkyMapper telescope,
to see first light in 2007.
- In April 2006, the ANU
joined the Giant Magellan Telescope
(GMT) consortium; the ANU's contribution to telescope design
and future instrumentation projects will take place at RSAA's
Advanced Instrumentation and Technology Centre (AITC) at Mount
Stromlo.
- RSAA hosts the only astronomer named in ISI's 2004 list of the
most cited scientists for Australia.
- RSAA hosts one of Australian Astronomy's two Fellows of the Royal
Society, has had two
Federation Fellows, and has 3 current members of staff who are members of
the Australian Academy of Science.
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