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6908 results for: ‘✅麻雀公益传奇(搭建-开发-联系TG电报:saolei44).FPXMEK’

  • Physics and Astronomy June 2021 Digest

    With exams now behind us, and hopefully a pleasant summer ahead, the Physics Community Team want to share some of the recent highlights from the news blog in May and June 2021.

  • Ground-breaking view of the cosmos revealed at Space Park Leicester

    Astounding images telling the story of a hidden universe through every phase of its cosmic history have been revealed for the first time at Space Park Leicester.

  • Arctic rocket launch could uncover unique features of Earth’s life-sustaining atmosphere

    A Leicester expert in space weather has helped launch a NASA mission from deep within the Arctic Circle which could uncover unique features of our atmosphere that enable life on Earth.

  • Leicester Launches Space Engineering Technician Apprenticeship

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 21 October 2020 The University of Leicester is supporting the future of the UK’s space industry after helping to develop the standard for a new Space Engineering Technician apprenticeship – the very first of...

  • The first Wide-Field Snapshots of the X-ray Universe

    The first truly wide-field X-ray images of the sky have been taken by a pathfinder mission testing Lobster-Eye technology for the Einstein Probe (EP) satellite, writes Prof. Paul O'Brien.

  • Dr. Naomi Rowe-Gurney on taking a Leicester PhD to NASA

    A five-year break in China, a worldwide pandemic, and delays to the most complex space telescope ever built: none of these were enough to stop Naomi Rowe-Gurney breaking new ground to complete her PhD at Leicester and land a dream job with NASA.

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

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 83

    Academic Librarian.

  • The Isle of Man study

    Background to the study This University of Leicester-funded study is being carried out by Hayley Dunn under the joint supervision of Professor Mark Jobling (Department of Genetics) and Dr Simon James (School of Archaeology) as part of research leading to a PhD degree.

  • The forgotten success of penal transportation reform in late Imperial Russia: the lowering of prison

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on June 8, 2016 By Mikhail Nakonechny . The late Imperial Russian prison and exile system is almost unequivocally considered to be the traditional embodiment of brutality, institutional inhumanity and injustice.

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