Science goes underground
Scientists are searching deep underground for hard-to-detect particles that stream across the Universe.
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Scientists are searching deep underground for hard-to-detect particles that stream across the Universe.
The role of our oceans in climate change is more complicated than you might think.
Do LGBT scientists feel they can be ‘out and proud’ at work? A biophysicist reflects on his own and other LGBT scientists’ experiences.
A new tool lets astronomers ‘listen’ to the Universe for the first time.
Teachers from across Europe discover the beauty of protein crystallography.
Science in School is published by EIROforum, a collaboration between eight of Europe’s largest inter-governmental scientific research organisations (EIROs). This article reviews some of the latest news from the EIROs.
Intrigue your students with some surprising experiments – it’s a great way to challenge their intuitions and explore the laws of mechanics.
Find out the link between science and humour with these light-hearted resources.
The Science in School office will be closing for Christmas soon, but first I’d like to thank everyone involved.
Who murdered Sir Ernest? How do you organise an astronomical school exchange? Why don’t ants have kings? How can you build an ECG for a Venus fly trap? What exactly happens in your intestines?
Science goes underground
Climate change: why the oceans matter
Where are all the LGBT scientists? Sexuality and gender identity in science
Turning on the cosmic microphone
Bringing structures to life
Sea cucumbers, celebrations and student internships
When things don’t fall: the counter-intuitive physics of balanced forces
Science and humour
Who is behind Science in School?
Murder, microbes and Myrmicinae: Science on Stage Germany