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  • Academic staff

    Browse our academic staff in the School of Education at Leicester and see their contact details to get in touch with them.

  • Current PhD students

    See the current PhD students working within Genetics and Genome Biology at Leicester. Find out how to connect with them via telephone and email.

  • British space community comes to Leicester for major conference

    The largest British Planetary Science Conference to date welcomes 200 space experts at Space Park Leicester, University of Leicester and the National Space Centre

  • Thursday 16th August Sol 11

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on August 17, 2012 We have now completed 12 sols of work on Mars.  Our work has been split into a combination of instrument checking, starting to look at the new data, particularly the MastCam images, and planning ahead.

  • 3rd April 2015 Sol 945

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on April 3, 2015 The heavy noble gases argon, krypton and xenon are known for their non-reactive nature and on Earth used for many applications where a gas is needed to protect a surface from the reactive species in...

  • Revealing branching time in single-cell omics data

    STREAM logo STREAM logo| New single-cell omics technology allows scientists to analyse cell development in ways that were not previously possible.

  • Stem cell

    vectors available for stem cells

  • Behavioural Ecology in Nature

    Module code: BS3066 This field-based module (held in the Easter vacation) will teach you how to conduct field studies of animal behaviour, using methods such as focal animal sampling, zero-one sampling and ad libitum sampling.

  • What do grasshoppers eat? It’s not just grass! New Leicester research shows similarities with mammal teeth like never before

    But analysis of the ecological importance of grasshoppers is not straightforward, and finding out what they eat requires detailed study of the contents of their guts or painstaking and time-consuming observations of how they feed in the wild. There is, however, a better way.

  • Monday 15th October Sol 69

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on October 15, 2012 As we are currently static in Rocknest the use of the Mast instruments comes to the fore.  In particular, ChemCam is important.  ChemCam uses a laser to hit rocks at a distance of metres away.

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