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  • Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features

    Find out more about our event: Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features, with speaker Professor Xiuying Wen.

  • Physics and Astronomy Fellowships in Leicester

    Physics and Astronomy Fellowships in Leicester, STFC, Royal Society, EPSRC, NERC

  • University library feeds more than the mind thanks to free veg seed giveaway

    The University of Leicester’s growing reputation has been bolstered with a scheme which allows its library members to take out seeds, as well as books.

  • ‘Closing the Gender Pay gap would take 95 years’

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on February 24, 2017 Across OECD nations at current rates of progress according to the latest PWC Women in work report.

  • One in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication research shows

    More than one in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication, according to a new study by researchers from the Leicester Diabetes Centre.

  • mkj13

    PlanetarySeminar: Solar wind and planetary magnetospheres coupling: macrophysical and microphysical processes.

  • Celebrating the Launch of JWST

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 26 December 2021 Space scientists at the University of Leicester are celebrating the launch of the most advanced space observatory ever built. After 25 years and a $10bn (£7.

  • Strengthening the link in SMILE

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 24 June 2021 Dr. Jenny Carter blogs about Leicester’s involvement in the Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer (SMILE) mission, scheduled for launch in 2024 .

  • First JWST Images – What do they Show?

    Professor Martin Barstow wrote in the Conversation to explain what JWST's first, amazing images show – and how it will change astronomy.

  • Neptune is cooler than we thought: Study reveals unexpected changes in atmospheric temperatures

    New research led by space scientists at the University of Leicester has revealed how temperatures in Neptune’s atmosphere have unexpectedly fluctuated over the past two decades.

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