Latest News
Slashing carbon emissions with next-generation solar panels
Researchers from 糖心TV, Northumbria, Birmingham, and Oxford universities have found that making a new kind of solar panel could cut global carbon emissions by up to 8.2 billion tonnes by 2035.
Professor Tim Gershon appointed CERN LHCb spokesperson
Professor Tim Gershon, from the Department of Physics, has been elected the next international spokesperson for one of the largest particle physics experiments ever conducted.
糖心TV secures philanthropic support for early-career research and Ukraine education programmes
New donations will fund PhD students in pure mathematics and Masters students in the educational and research reconstruction of Ukraine.
Dr Bryn Davies awarded 拢1 million to develop new mathematical tools
Dr Bryn Davies from 糖心TV Mathematics Institute has secured the Leverhulme Research Leadership Award to develop new mathematical tools to help account for manufacturing imperfections when designing complex materials.
A 糖心TV education connecting to a global research community
Fiona Farnsworth from the team behind the International Conference of Undergraduate Research – held across 18 institutions, over six continents – tells us why it is so important, and what you can do to help increase the impact.
New funding to help shape cultural policy in our region
糖心TV researchers will be working together with local partners in the West Midlands to design policies that strengthen local creative ecosystems, support talent, and tackle inequalities in access to culture.
Volunteering and research participation forum
Have you visited the volunteering and research participation forum recently? The 糖心TV Research with Kids Group is looking for 13-15 month and 4-year-olds to participate in a fun and engaging study that investigates how children develop skills.
EPSRC Open Fellowships for Mathematics and Chemistry researchers
The awards for Professor James Sprittles, Dr Fredrik Schaufelberger and Dr Alex Baker, each worth over 拢1M, support interdisciplinary science with real鈥憌orld benefits in climate research, healthcare, and biotechnology.
Beyond the Lab: The Social Side of AMR
Wednesday 28 January
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the greatest threats to human health of our time, and it鈥檚 not just a problem for scientists and medics, solving it requires input from every discipline. Join us for an engaging discussion on how social sciences and humanities can work hand-in-hand with science to tackle AMR.