The importance of failure: interview with Paul Nurse
Paul Nurse’s failed experiment inspired a Nobel-prizewinning career.
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Paul Nurse’s failed experiment inspired a Nobel-prizewinning career.
This medical treatment might sound repulsive, but don’t pooh-pooh it just yet.
In the fifth and final article in this series on astronomy and the electromagnetic spectrum, find out how scientists use the European Space Agency’s missions to observe the sky in far-infrared, sub-millimetre and microwave light.
Repairing a fusion device can be challenging for humans. Drones may be the answer.
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.
We are pleased to announce the winners of the student writing competition: the search for the strangest species on Earth.
Gravitational waves are among the most subtle messengers that reach us across the cosmos. But how can their infinitesimal effects be detected?
A blade of grass and a high tower both need to stand up against forces that threaten to level them. Are there design principles that they can exploit to achieve this?
How do astronomers measure distances to the stars? Using a digital camera to record parallax shift is an accurate and authentic method that can be used in a classroom.
Challenge your students to work out which exploits of comic-book heroes like Superman might actually be possible – given a miracle or two.
The importance of failure: interview with Paul Nurse
Manipulating the gut microbiome: the potential of poo
More than meets the eye: the cold and the distant Universe
Fusion drones: robot technicians for nuclear devices
Sentinel satellites, school ambassadors and synchrotron studies of dinosaurs
Student competition: winners announced
Good vibrations: how to catch a gravitational wave
Bionic structures: from stalks to skyscrapers
Finding the scale of space
Heroes and villains: the science of superheroes