Aveiro

The City

Aveiro is surrounded by salt-flats, beaches and lagoons. It is crossed by three canals spanned by low-arched bridges, and is divided into two parts by the Central Canal. The canal itself is lined with fine Art Nouveau buildings and beautifully painted gondola-like boats known as moliceiros. These were once mainly used to collect seaweed, but now transport tourists down the canal.  Once a big seaport, Aveiro lies in a region of valleys cut by mountains and fertile lagoon plains. In the old quarter, tourists can see the quaint whitewashed houses of the fishermen and visit, early in the morning, the Mercado do Peixe (Fish Market), an auction of the fish caught during the night.

Facing the Atlantic nearby are the sandy beaches of Barra (with the country's tallest lighthouse; the second-tallest in Europe and third in the world) and Costa Nova (known for its attractive candy-striped houses). The fine beach of São Jacinto lies close to woodland and the São Jacinto Dunes Natural Reserve, with well-preserved dunes and varied fauna and flora.

Those who appreciate good food can taste the delicious eel stew and a variety of sea and lagoon fish soups. But Aveiro is specially known for its sweets: the most famous is ovos moles (soft eggs), sweetened egg yolk in candied casings shaped like fish or barrels.

 

The University

Created in 1973, the University of Aveiro quickly became one of the most dynamic and innovative universities in Portugal. Now a public foundation under private law, it continues to develop and implement its mission to provide undergraduate and postgraduate education, to generate research and promote cooperation with society.

Attended by about 15,000 students on undergraduate and postgraduate programmes, the UA has achieved a significant position amongst higher education institutions in Portugal, being one of the top universities regarding the quality of its infrastructures, the strength of its research and the excellence of its staff. The British Times Higher Education Ranking considered the UA the 66th best “young university” (less than 50 years) in the world and the best Portuguese.

Excellence in research is one of the hallmarks of the University: 15 of its 18 research units were classified as Very good or Excellent by international panels under the sponsorship of the Portuguese National Science Foundation in its most recent round of assessments. Four of these units carry the label of Associate Laboratory, a distinction attributed by the Portuguese Government to research institutions of sustained and exceptional merit.

 

Gr@v – Gravitation at Aveiro

Created in 2010, Gr@v is an international team of researchers, based at the University of Aveiro, working on gravitational physics in the context of astrophysics, cosmology and high-energy physics. Amongst Gr@v researchers are university staff (Domingos Barbosa, Alexandre Correia, Carlos Herdeiro), associate researchers (Thomas Kehoe, Helena Morais, Eugen Radu), post-doctoral researchers (Juan Carlos Degollado, Jai Grover, João Rosa, Marco Sampaio), and graduate students (Miguel Bergano, Flávio Coelho, Filipe Fernandes, Helgi Rúnarsson, Mengjie Wang). Research topics include Cosmology, Black Hole physics, High-energy Particle Physics, Celestial Mechanics, Exoplanets, Solar System dynamics and other aspects of gravitation.
For more information on research, activities and funding opportunities, please visit the group’s webpage at gravitation.web.ua.pt.