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17336 results for: ‘K564(pc wap)康复培训学校网站模板✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.nVAEBAzTBI’

  • Could human tissue be used by researchers in place of animal models

    Professor Peter Bradding from the Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation is involved in a research project examining how to expand the use of human lung tissue to reduce the use of animal tissue in research.

  • Advanced Solo Mechanics

    Module code: EG4116

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    Understand more about how your data is held in regards to the website with our website privacy notice.

  • Leicester recognised for bang for the buck on research at Higher Education Oscars

    Our University secured the THE DataPoints Merit Award trophy at this year’s Times Higher Education Awards, held in association with Santander Universities UK.

  • 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.

  • Discovery of how limiting damage from an asthma attack could stop disease

    Leicester scientists are part of a team which has discovered a new cause for asthma that sparks hope for treatment that could prevent the life-threatening disease.

  • Economics in the Rear-View Mirror

    Posted by William Farrell in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on October 12, 2015 Joseph Schumpeter, who taught at Harvard from 1932 to 1950. Image licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons – https://commons.wikimedia.

  • Back to the Future Why it should never be remade

    To film aficionados, today is a very special day - 21 October 2015 is famous amongst Back to the Future fans as it is the day to which Marty McFly, played by Michael J. Fox, travels when he is sent to the future in Back to the Future II.

  • Black holes could grow as large as 50 billion suns research shows

    Black holes at the heart of galaxies could swell to 50 billion times the mass of the sun before losing the discs of gas they rely on to sustain themselves, according to research by Professor Andrew King from the Department of Physics and Astronomy.

  • Major step in UK contribution to space mission to study solar wind

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 23 October 2021 Space scientists from the University of Leicester have delivered a key component for a new mission to study the impact of the solar wind on Earth’s magnetic field.

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