Search

10777 results for: ‘java音乐播放器小程序源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.pjlnnCzKiehMy’

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

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • 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...

  • Methods of making: palaeographical problems, codicological challenges

    The first of three Insular Manuscripts workshops, taking place in London 2017, it covered the manufacture of parchment and manuscripts at St Gallen.

  • Business Law

    Module code: AF3083 Accountants deal with a company’s financial activities and they need to be aware of what laws are in place to protect themselves and their companies from any legal issues.

  • Observing Jupiter’s aurora from the top of a Volcano

    Posted by Rosie Johnson in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on July 1, 2016 As part of the ground based support for the Juno mission, I visited the Mauna Kea Observatories, Hawaii, in February through to the beginning of March this year.

  • Physics and Astronomy Blog: Showcasing the cutting-edge research and diverse scientific community in

    Showcasing the cutting-edge research and diverse scientific community in the School of Physics and Astronomy.

  • Saturn’s high-altitude winds generate an extraordinary aurorae

    Leicester space scientists have discovered a never-before-seen mechanism fuelling huge planetary aurorae at Saturn.

  • First JWST Images – What do they Show?

    Professor Martin Barstow wrote in the Conversation to explain what JWST's first, amazing images show – and how it will change astronomy.

  • Seminar archive

    Find out more about the upcoming seminars held by m:iv Leicester.

  • Women's Writing in the Midlands, 1750-1850

    This commissioned piece from the Centre for New Writing focusses on the lives and writing of the abolitionist women in the Midlands during the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth century.

Back to top
MENU