Search

14248 results for: ‘CONTACT COLASHIP.SHOP TO ’

  • AstroSeminar: Disc eccentricity driving type I and type II outbursts in Be/X-ray binaries

    Posted by er198 in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 26 October 2020 This week (28th Oct) the virtual Wednesday talk will be delivered by Dr.

  • Membership 2024-2025

    Browse the members of Senate at the University of Leicester, including the Chair, Vice-Chair and more.

  • Catrin Pritchard

    Catrin received her MA in Biochemistry from Jesus College, Oxford University in 1983, and in 1987 she finished her PhD at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund on mapping of the male determining gene on the human Y chromosome.

  • English Language Teaching Unit celebrates international research students

    The second annual English Language Teaching Unit (ELTU) Research Festival was held on Wednesday 18th February.

  • ITVs Code of a Killer concludes tonight

    The concluding episode of the two-part ITV fictional drama ‘Code of a Killer’, based on Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys’s discovery of DNA fingerprinting at the University of Leicester and its first use in a murder enquiry, will air tonight (13 April) from 9pm.

  • Creating tomorrow’s cardiovascular research leaders

    The University of Leicester has been awarded more than one and a half million pounds by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) to fund a 4-year PhD Programme to train the next generation of research leaders in cardiovascular science.

  • Completed PhD research

    PhD students make a major contribution to the research profile of the University of Leicester. Browse a list of completed PhDs in Museum Studies.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 164

    Academic Librarian.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Celebrating the Launch of JWST

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 26 December 2021 Space scientists at the University of Leicester are celebrating the launch of the most advanced space observatory ever built. After 25 years and a $10bn (£7.

Back to top
MENU