Stage lights: physics and drama
Imagine sending music across the room by laser. Sounds impossible, doesn’t it? But Alessio Bernardelli’s students did just that – and then developed a play to explain the science behind it. Here’s how to do it.
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Imagine sending music across the room by laser. Sounds impossible, doesn’t it? But Alessio Bernardelli’s students did just that – and then developed a play to explain the science behind it. Here’s how to do it.
What do astronomy and film have in common? Both can involve Jochen Liske, astronomer and actor. Karin Ranero Celius takes us on a trip to the Paranal Observatory in Chile and tells us about Jochen’s latest film: Das Auge 3D.
How short is ‘very short’? Well, pretty short – between 120 and 150 pages. The pages are small, too, 175 mm x 110 mm, but then so is the type. ‘Introduction?’ …well, it depends what’s being introduced.
In the second of two articles, Jarek Bryk describes how scientists dig deep into our genes – to test the molecular basis of an evolutionary adaptation in humans.
Eleanor Hayes reports on the recent teacher workshop at the European Space Research and Technology Centre.
Do men and women share the same sense of humour? Perhaps, but their brains react differently to it, as Allan Reiss explains in this issue’s feature article.
The physics of clouds and their role in our climate have perplexed scientists for decades. Karin Ranero Celius investigates.
Men and women react differently to humour. Allan Reiss tells Eleanor Hayes why this is news.
Stage lights: physics and drama
An astronomer in a 3D world
Very Short Introductions to Evolution, Human Evolution and the History of Life, By Brian and Deborah Charlesworth (Evolution), Bernard Wood (Human Evolution) and Michael J Benton (The History of Life)
Human evolution: testing the molecular basis
Teachers fly high at the European Space Agency
Welcome to the seventeenth issue of Science in School
Clouds: puzzling pieces of climate
The science of humour: Allan Reiss