News & analysis – Page 31
-
-
News
Syngenta unveil interactive periodic table
Syngenta has launched a free interactive chemistry resource
-
News
The effectiveness of mentoring
A small scale study into the effectiveness of mentoring in improving chemistry students' academic performance, was carried out by Jane Essex
-
News
Cheap and efficient artificial leaf debuted
Scientists in the US say they have produced a 100 W 'artificial leaf' that uses sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen
-
News
From coffee shop to biodiesel source in one step
Spent coffee grounds have been turned into biodiesel by researchers from Portugal and Spain
-
News
GSK to pay tuition fees
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) has outlined new plans to encourage talented students graduating from UK universities
-
News
Meet the Universities
Meet the Universities (MTU) will be held at Salters' Hall in London on Saturday 2 July 2011
-
News
Big bangs and teacher fellows
Around 29,000 people flocked to the Big Bang at London's ICC ExCeL Centre
-
News
Scientists in Sport
More than 100 children from a range of schools across South London attended the launch of Scientists in Sport at King's College London
-
News
Spinning up water beams
Researchers in Israel have found a way to separate water molecules that differ only in how their hydrogen nuclei are spinning
-
News
The trouble with mercury
Researchers in the US have used laboratory simulations to reveal the two-faced nature of microbes
-
News
Visualising Climate Change
The Royal Society of Chemistry has launched a new resource to help students and teachers understand the underlying science of climate change
-
News
X-raying a DVD
Little is known about the detailed structural changes that take place when data are stored and retrieved
-
-
News
Atomic weights change to ranges
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry have published a new table of atomic weights
-
News
Hives no longer buzz
There are growing concerns that colony collapse disorder (CCD), which is ravaging honeybee populations, could be due partly to pesticide use.
-
-
-
News
Gender bias still exists
Boys twice as likely as girls to aspire to work in science, RSC poll shows
-