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12445 results for: ‘students announcements archive 2011 august 2011’

  • Creating circular economies for technology metals

    Professor Andrew Abbott explores the cutting-edge science making recycling metals eco-compatible.

  • Akoya PhenoCycler-Fusion

    Information In 2022 the facility obtained MRC funding for the purchase of the Akoya PhenoCycler-Fusion system (Lead applicant Dr Gareth Miles) Location Robert Kilpatrick Clinical Science Building, room 533 Contact Dr Kees Straatman +44 (0)116 252...

  • Commercialisation

    Spin-outs The University of Leicester has a rich history of pioneering innovations and turning them into commercial success stories across multiple industries. The world-class research that takes place has led to a large portfolio of spin-out companies.

  • Vision Sciences

    Discover more about the study of Vision and Language at the University of Leicester. Hosted within the School of Psychology and Vision Sciences.

  • Ewa Zelazna

    The academic profile of Dr Ewa Zelazna, Lecturer at University of Leicester

  • Ravenous black hole consumes three Earths’-worth of star every time it passes

    Massive burst of X-rays detected by University of Leicester astronomers indicates material three times the mass of Earth burning up in a black hole.

  • Tellurium (Te) and Selenium (Se) (TeaSe)

    Learn about the Tellurium (Te) and Selenium (Se) project in The School of Geography, Geology and the Environment at the University of Leicester.

  • New research study launches to improve pressure injury care for children with dark skin tones in hospitals

    Researchers at the University of Leicester (UoL) are leading a clinical research study aimed at preventing pressure injuries in children and young people with dark skin tones in hospitals

  • Leicester research aims to tackle overheating in children’s hospital wards

    The University of Leicester is part of a study which aims to reduce the health risks posed by children’s hospital wards heating up due to climate change.

  • Animals’ ‘sixth sense’ more widespread than previously thought

    A study using fruit flies, led by researchers at The Universities of Leicester and Manchester, suggests the animal world’s ability to sense a magnetic field may be more widespread than previously thought.

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