This week in Science (21-10-08)
A weekly summary of interesting headlines in Science and Technology
The student newspaper of Imperial College London
The student newspaper of Imperial College London
Section Editor: Angie Lo and Taylor Pomfret
The science section covers discoveries in the world of science research at Imperial and around the world
A weekly summary of interesting headlines in Science and Technology
Colossal, a biotech firm, aims to bring back woolly mammoths by creating an elephant-mammoth hybrid and use it to fight climate change
While some may be pleasantly surprised by Shell's involvement in climate change science, this was nothing but another attempt at greenwashing
Tech Editor Sudarshan Sreeram reports on a passion project of Imperial student James Ball, who has repurposed an old oscilloscope
Covid-19, Perseverance, and Climate Change - what we can learn from a global pandemic about public science communication.
Science contributor Naomi Dinmore answers a tough science question, and takes an in-depth look at how much renewable energy we can access in the UK.
New research finds iridium, a rare metal on Earth, to be present at the centre of the Chicxulub crater off the coast of Mexico.
This week, scientists confirmed that the brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys) has been found in the UK.
Last week, I was lucky enough to be offered the first dose of the coronavirus vaccine. Here is my experience.
Science Editor Lily Shepherd looks at recent displays of vaccine nationalism in Europe and examines the issues surrounding these policies
Frequent Diet Coke consumer? Coffee addict? Science Editor Julia provides some insight into how caffeine works and what it actually does
Science editor Lily Shepherd questions why the emergency response to the coronavirus pandemic can't be applied to the climate crisis
The Felix lockdown documentary launches next week. It is the product of great effort and we hope that you will enjoy it
The Felix Science section launch their new series of pop science articles and videos, answering some of science's biggest questions
Scientists at the University of Science and Technology of China have succeeded in integrating a huge quantum key distribution (QKD) network
Ioana Esanu (writer) and Liyang Zhao (video producer) tackle a science question that's on everyone's mind at the moment.
5 / 7