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  • Introducing SKYLARK

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 26 October 2020 The SKYLARK rocket dominates our newly-revamped foyer in the School of Physics and Astronomy. This blog post provides some of the history of Leicester’s involvement in the SKYLARK project.

  • Scientists invited to take advantage of leading high energy research centres

    Our University is facilitating a Europe-wide programme that makes available some of the leading facilities in high energy astrophysics to scientists from around the world.

  • Researchers provide new insights into gene regulation

    A team of researchers led by the our University has shed new light on how the regulation machinery that controls gene expression works by characterising a complex known as the NuRD complex.

  • Leicester teams lead the podium in Formula 1 aerodynamics race

    Two teams from the University's Department of Engineering took the top two positions on the podium in the second race of the UniFi Motorsport competition.

  • Classical Greece since the Enlightenment

    Module code: HS3805 Module Outline Shelley declared ‘We are all Greeks. Our laws, our literature, our religion, our arts have their root in Greece.

  • Leicester academic curates major art exhibition in Rome

    A University of Leicester academic has curated a major art exhibition currently being shown at the Scuderie del Quirinale in Rome. Professor David Ekserdjian, from the University of Leicester’s Department of History of Art and Film, curated “Correggio e Parmigianino.

  • ‘Fizzy pop’ process reveals copper-rich volcanoes

    Identifying magmas that experience the same process that makes fizzy drinks ‘bubbly’ has been used by a team of University of Leicester geologists to predict whether a volcano’s magma is likely to be rich in copper.

  • Rajnikant Patel

    The academic profile of Dr Rajnikant Patel, Associate Professor at University of Leicester

  • 12th September 2017 Sol 1814 – Curiosity’s View Across Gale Crater

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 12, 2017 View from Vera Rubin Ridge   The Curiosity Rover has reached an elevation of 300 metres above our landing site.

  • 1st February 2018 Sol 1952 Vera Rubin Ridge and Scotland on Mars

    Mars Science Laboratory

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