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  • The first Wide-Field Snapshots of the X-ray Universe

    The first truly wide-field X-ray images of the sky have been taken by a pathfinder mission testing Lobster-Eye technology for the Einstein Probe (EP) satellite, writes Prof. Paul O'Brien.

  • Reframing difference and disability

    Collaborative research projects about societal attitudes towards disability and difference.

  • College House

    College House was built in 1872, and is perhaps most famous for being the childhood home of Sir David and Richard Attenborough. Find out more about its history.

  • University of Leicester space scientists celebrate success for Gaia

    University of Leicester space scientists are celebrating success after the Gaia project, which aims to create a highly accurate 3D map of our galaxy, picked up two prestigious awards for best Space Achievement and best Space Industry/Project Team.

  • Awards winning comedian, Francesca Martinez, reflects on her involvement in a Research Centre for Mu

    Posted by Sarah Plumb in School of Museum Studies Blog on February 24, 2017 Exceptional & Extraordinary was a research project initiated by the Research Centre for Museums and Galleries (RCMG) at the University of Leicester which set out to stimulate public and medical...

  • New telescope to be the ‘GOTO’ for gravitational wave events

    Leicester space scientists will contribute to a huge new telescope, made up of identical arrays on opposite sides of the planet, to track down sources of gravitational waves.

  • Leicester graduate launches space career with NASA

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 1 February 2021 Congratulations to Leicester PhD student Daniel Watters, a PhD student from Leicester’s Earth Observation Science Group, has been awarded a NASA Postdoctoral Program Fellowship at the NASA...

  • Future health technology needs to take into account children and young people’s preferences, say researchers

    Health technology should be easy to use, have the ability to be personalised, allow the user to choose how their information is shared and where possible, have in-built games and incentives according to children and young people

  • Researcher lands £250k funding to continue investigation into DNA damage and its link to cancer

    A university researcher has been awarded a prestigious prize to continue her cutting-edge work to understand how the body responds to DNA damage that can ultimately lead to cancer.

  • Korean Women and the ‘Cat’s Labour Union’

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on March 24, 2017   In this week’s blog, ULSB PhD student Chanhyo Jeong ( cj156@le.ac.

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