about the programme
The Applied Informatics in the Natural Sciences master’s study programme is intended for students who wish to deepen their knowledge of informatics and learn to combine it with the natural sciences, primarily applied physics. During their studies, students focus on advanced software development, modelling real systems, analysing experiment data, and developing tools for solving complex tasks across disciplines. They also study, for example, the simulation of physical phenomena, parallel computing, and the design of database systems for collecting and analysing scientific data.
Programme content
Students will attend core courses focused on:
- database systems and big data processing ,
- modelling with the Monte Carlo method,
- simulating production systems in economics.
career prospects
Graduates can pursue careers in various fields — from research and development, through ML/AI applications, to big data processing. Thanks to their knowledge of informatics and the natural sciences, they can work in software companies, startups, research centres, or public administration as data analysts, system administrators, experts in computational modelling, or members of development teams focused on simulations and experimental physics.
state final exam
Compulsory subject
General Informatics
Optional subjects
Problem Analysis in Informatics
Optimalization and Classification
Methods of Computational Physics
Parallel Algorithms and Architectures