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9711 results for: ‘价值500元的GPlay社区江湖 土豪版 全插件版 Discuz!-插件✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.VzAsWxTicBO’

  • Astronomys wonderful tool the telescope to be explored at upcoming lecture

    The telescope - ‘astronomy’s wonderful tool’ - will be the focus of a free public lecture on Thursday 8 October as part of the International Year of Light 2015.

  • Oadby telescope in black hole study

    A telescope in Oadby is playing a crucial part in observing a rare astronomical phenomenon. NASA's Swift satellite detected a rising tide of high-energy X-rays from the constellation Cygnus on June 15, just before 2:32 p.m. EDT.

  • Biological Sciences (Neuroscience) BSc

    No computer is more powerful or complex than the human brain. And you’ll get to study the central role it plays in our nervous system – and what can happen when it goes wrong. This degree includes the option to change your specialism in your second year.

  • Biological Sciences (Zoology) BSc

    Zoology covers the behaviour, ecology and evolution of everything within the animal kingdom. Alongside the fundamental theories of zoology, you’ll also gain hands-on lab and fieldwork experience. This degree includes the option to change your specialism in your second year.

  • Biological Sciences (Microbiology) BSc

    Microorganisms. They might be small, but they tell us more about life on Earth than almost any other living things. You’ll learn how they’re both helpful and harmful, as well as the evolving role of microbiology in biotechnology, health and disease.

  • Medical Biochemistry BSc

    To make big breakthroughs in diagnosing and treating disease, we often have to look at life at the molecular level. Studying biochemistry in this way will help you tackle the world’s most pressing health issues.

  • Medical Physiology BSc

    The human body is a well-oiled machine. But it’s still susceptible to disease. Why is this? You’ll answer questions like this through studying how the body works at a molecular, cellular and systems level.

  • Reproduction and gene shuffling in malaria parasites: how does it work?

    Scientists from the Universities of Leicester and Nottingham have received nearly £600,000 to research how sexual development and gene shuffling within the malaria parasite could help to control malaria transmission.

  • Core values: the geoscientists searching for climate answers beneath the ocean floor

    Two geoscientists from the School of Geography, Geology and the Environment are on a voyage to unearth the hidden history within Hawai’ian fossil coral reefs.

  • The Bulletin - Game Of Thrones star is Leicester graduate

    In this episode of The Bulletin from the University of Leicester News Centre: Hear Game of Thrones and Humans star Will Tudor discuss memories of his time as a University of Leicester student.

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