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  • New Saturn images show a change of seasons – and a last glimpse of its huge, warm polar vortex

    New observations of Saturn by University of Leicester planetary scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) of the famous ringed planet

  • Expert opinions cover the eight principles underlying tumour growth

    PhD student Mohan Harihar from the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology has written an article for Think: Leicester explaining the eight ‘Hallmarks of Cancer’.

  • People

    Find out more about the people who work, study and research in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Leicester.

  • Research areas

    The Institute is composed of 26 active research groups, each led by an academic from the department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Chemistry, Cardiovascular Sciences or Respiratory Sciences, collaborating with colleagues from across the University.

  • Sue Shackleton

    The academic profile of Dr Sue Shackleton, Associate Professor at University of Leicester

  • Leicester author shares untold story of Mary Attenborough

    Much of the book has been informed by documents including letters, diaries and photographs held in the care of the University of Leicester’s archive collections.

  • How to excel in the years following your PhD

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on December 10, 2020 This Blog Post is provided by Nick Masca, University of Leicester PhD graduate. Nick is currently Head of Marketing Algorighms / Data Science with Marks and Spencer.

  • Research students

    Browse a list of Psychology and Vision Science research students. Find out more about our PhD and PsyD students and their research interests, alongside ways to get in touch.

  • Distant supermassive black hole shows high velocity sign of over-eating

    University of Leicester scientists describe how the capture of new matter - lasting a few days and corresponding to several Earth masses - formed a ring around the hole, before being partly swallowed by the hole, with excess matter ejected as a high velocity wind.

  • More than 50 years of Leicester in space

    In World Space Week we reflect on the University of Leicester’s long history of making out of this world discoveries.

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