Self-healing aircraft wings: a dream or a possibility?
Taking inspiration from nature’s amazing ability to heal wounds, this biology-inspired technology could create aircraft wings that fix themselves.
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Taking inspiration from nature’s amazing ability to heal wounds, this biology-inspired technology could create aircraft wings that fix themselves.
Using effervescent heartburn tablets, model the action of volcanoes to measure the intensity of the explosions and create your own measurement scale.
Win the Beamline for Schools competition and take a trip to CERN to do your own real-life particle physics experiment.
Use one of the most surprising experiments in classical mechanics to teach the scientific method, video analysis and mechanics.
The new academic year is a time for new beginnings: new challenges, opportunities, students, colleagues and, most importantly, new ideas. Possibilities stretch out before us, each one beckoning us to a different outcome.
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.
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Teaching viscosity can be sweetened by using chocolate.
Self-healing aircraft wings: a dream or a possibility?
Measuring the explosiveness of a volcanic eruption
CERN’s high-school physics competition shines bright
Can something accelerate upwards while falling down?
Editorial issue 37
Sign up your students to see the large and the small
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Melts in your viscometer, not in your hand