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  • Pokmon Go helps highlight Leicesters inventive approach to communications

    The Pokémon Go craze has helped millions of people around the world to ease the Type 2 diabetes burden by walking and catching digital monsters. Now, the viral app has helped our University snag an accolade for its 'inventive' approach to communications.

  • Leicester students solve age-old question: How much Christmas spirit is needed to lift Santa’s sleigh?

    Students at the University of Leicester have discovered the answer to an age-old question this Christmas: just how much Christmas spirit is required to lift Santa’s sleigh? Using equations and principles learned on their physics course, five student researchers calculated...

  • Why Leicester

    Choose the ELTU at Leicester for an unforgettable experience, small class sizes, a social life, scholarships and great transport links.

  • 2020

    Here the list of publications of 2020 can be found.

  • Transient Astrophysics

    At Leicester we study explosive transients such as Gamma-Ray Bursts, the sources of gravitational waves and activity connected to galactic nuclei.

  • The Archaeological Survey of Sudanese Nubia (ASSN) 1963-1969

    A project page for the University of Leicester's research into the 1963-1969 archaeological survey of Sudanese Nubia

  • Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory

    The Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory data centre is hosted at the University of Leicester, and was initially designed to follow up Gamma-Ray bursts.

  • Ukraine support

    Check University of Leicester support for Ukrainians affected by the war, university twinning, fundraising, and welcome through Homes for Ukraine.

  • Leicester team shows how to reduce carbon emissions from agricultural peatland

    Raising the water table could slow down global warming, boost crop yields, and preserve peat soils according to a new study.

  • First photo from Junos Jupiter orbit released

    NASA’s Juno spacecraft has sent its first in-orbit view. Juno’s visible-light camera was turned on six days after Juno fired its main engine and placed itself into orbit around the largest planetary inhabitant of our solar system. The new view was obtained on 10 July at 6.

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