#workwithLJMU
Discover how employers can work with LJMU and advertise opportunities for students on our job board.
Discover how employers can work with LJMU and advertise opportunities for students on our job board.
LJMU Canary Islands
The Astrophysics Research Institute specialist subject areas include theoretical galaxy formation, time domain astrophysics, stellar populations and astronomical instrumentation. Discover more about each of these areas.
Facilities within the Astrophysics Research Institute include The Liverpool Telescope, sited on La Palma in the Canary Islands, it is a fully robotic telescope owned and operated by the Institute.
Read more about Liverpool John Moore's University staff recruitment privacy notice.
Read the oration for Professor Francisco Sánchez Martínez on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Peter Wheeler.
Find out what you can see and do in Liverpool while you're visiting for the ECBB conference.
Ancestral faces Canary Islands
The Astrophysics Research Institute is interested in star formation, stellar evolution, time-domain astrophysics, galaxy formation and clusters, dynamics and evolution. Our aim is to become an internationally recognised centre of excellence in astrophysics. Find out more about the Institute, including our Research Excellence Framework results and who we collaborate with.
By studying the gas and stars that shape the Milky Way as well as other galaxies in the local Universe, we can understand the life cycles of stars like our Sun, unravel the chemical enrichment history of the universe, and probe the existence of black holes across a wide mass spectrum.