by Iliyah | Sep 11, 2019 | Astronomy and Planetary Science, Engineering & Computer Science, Physical Sciences & Mathematics
Dr Robert Winglee – High Velocity Impacts: A New Way to Collect Samples from Space Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte For now, planetary scientists can only dream of getting their hands-on rock samples taken from the surfaces...
by Iliyah | Sep 5, 2019 | Physical Sciences & Mathematics
Dr Scott King – The Dawn Mission: Casting New Light on Ceres Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte The dwarf planet Ceres is just a fraction of the size of Pluto, yet it holds valuable information about the evolution of our solar...
by Iliyah | Aug 28, 2019 | Physical Sciences & Mathematics
Professor Andrei Pimenov – Controlling Light by Manipulating Electromagnons Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte Within some specialised materials, light can appear to move in mysterious ways, rotating around its direction of...
by Iliyah | Aug 14, 2019 | Astronomy and Planetary Science, Physical Sciences & Mathematics
Dr Peter Evans – Retro-Causality: Unravelling the Mysteries of Quantum Cosmology Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte Despite many years of research aiming to unite quantum mechanics with cosmological theories, researchers in...
by Iliyah | Jul 31, 2019 | Astronomy and Planetary Science, Editor's Pick, Physical Sciences & Mathematics
Dr Scot Rafkin – Exploring the Weather of Titan and Mars Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte The moons and rocky planets of our Solar System may be remote, unfamiliar worlds, but even on the very strangest of them, the weather...
by Iliyah | Jul 25, 2019 | Physical Sciences & Mathematics
CERN’s Future Circular Collider Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pocket Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email VKontakte Geneva-based particle physics research centre, CERN, plans to build a £20bn particle accelerator that is almost four times longer than today’s largest and most...
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