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6970 results for: ‘养羊区块链完整源码/虚拟币/农场/理财源码/带教程✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ijOyOTQTBmVXKkc’

  • Exoplanets and their Origins – Professor Richard Alexander Centenary Inaugural Lecture

    Exoplanets and their Origins - Professor Richard Alexander Centenary Inaugural Lecture

  • Podcast: John Remedios on Protecting Earth

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 19 November 2021 John Remedios, Professor of Earth Observation Science, and Director of the National Centre for Earth Observation, discusses the part physics plays in the studying of the atmosphere, the...

  • Join AstRoSoc and the Kerbal Space Program

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 25 October 2020 Another excellent reason to join our Astronomy and Rocketry Society (AstRoSoc) – the opportunity to compete and win prizes with the Kerbal Space Program! For more information about AstRoSoc,...

  • Events

    Decarbonisation net Zero target COP26 Steel Industry

  • SMILE Mission

    ESA/CAS mission SMILE to study the solar wind and Earth's magnetosphere

  • PhD in Creative Writing

    Pursuing a PhD in Creative Writing at the University Leicester means becoming part of an exciting and dynamic research and creative environment. Find out more about our PhD programme.

  • Toxic formaldehyde’s dual nature to be probed with new chemical tool

    University of Leicester chemistry researchers have developed new compounds to better study formaldehyde

  • GHOST in the sky captures Greenhouse Gases

    An instrument co-designed by University of Leicester scientists has been used in aircraft flights over the UK to monitor greenhouse gases.

  • Reaching for the stars

    A PhD student at our University has been recognised internationally for her research into life on Mars. Berivan Esen is amongst the 30 women around the world who have been awarded the prestigious Zonta International Amelia Earhart Fellowship for 2018-19.

  • Pick your poison study examines the use of plant poison on prehistoric weaponry

    Archaeologists have long believed that our ancestors used poisons extracted from plants such as foxgloves and hemlock to make their weapons more lethal and kill their prey more swiftly.

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