Putting numbers on how well looked after the animals that end up on our plate are...
Interviews with Scientists
Interviews about medicine, science, technology and engineering with scientists and researchers internationally...
The scientific developments by Professor McKeating’s team don’t just help us with treating the diseases; the more we...
At the end of World Hepatitis Day, Jules - a hepatitis C patient for over 20 years - regarded the researchers as the...
And also this week scientists have come up with a reason for you to tear up that periodic table which is on the wall of...
2009 marks a 100 years since the opening of London Science Museum. To mark this special anniversary, the Science...
Professor David Adams explains the types of hepatitis, and how they are treated...
This Week in Science History saw, in 1958, the publication of a significant paper that began the use of ultrasound as a...
Imagine if you could select your house on a computer screen, and simply hit print! Rupert Soar is hoping to make this a...
We speak to Professor Robert Kennicutt: one of the first to describe the Hubble constant and now recipient of the...
Shaun Fitzgerald takes us on a tour of the School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies where a giant atrium...
Controlling how natural light gets into a building could help to reduce energy demands and costs. Professor Stephen...
This Week in Science History saw, in 1981, the publication of an article that was the first to describe a new endemic...
Julie Segre takes us on a tour of the diverse species of bacteria her team have discovered crawling over our skin.
Aerosols and spray cans from the bottom of the bombardier beetle; Andy McIntosh tells us more.
Chris Elvin tells us about the super-springy protein that his lab managed to synthesise.
Forget wind turbines made from vast sheets of metal - make them from fast-growing bamboo! Jim Platts tells us more.
This Week in Science History saw in 1919, the solar eclipse that proved Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity...
Biological Link between Cancer and Depression
Getting a scratch or cut in your skin usually means you have to put up with a scar later. But this may not be the case...
This week in science history saw, in 1927, the death of Eduard Bruckner, the German geographer and climatologist who...
It's estimated that 80% of people with hepatitis C aren't aware they have it. World Heptatitis Day is aimed...
This month, Chris Vallance tells us about a new generation of eBook readers, and how authors are using social...