Scientists have discovered a giant cosmic filament where galaxies spin in sync with the structure that holds them together.
Loureiro's colleagues in Cambridge and beyond are reflecting on his legacy in physics, teaching, and research leadership.
Ramanujan’s insights into pi are now guiding scientists toward a deeper understanding of how the universe works.
Ramanujan’s elegant formulas for calculating pi, developed more than a century ago, have unexpectedly resurfaced at the heart ...
The first pulsar was discovered in 1967 by Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Finding these mysterious signals forever changed astronomy.
FlexEnable, the leader in the development and industrialisation of flexible organic transistors and optics, has won a prestigious Business Innovation Award from the Institute of Physics for the ...
Physicists from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have found that pure mathematical formulae used to calculate the value of pi 100 years ago by Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan has ...
Marika Taylor currently receives funding from EPSRC, STFC, UK government deparments and the European Horizon programme. In 1980, Stephen Hawking gave his first lecture as Lucasian Professor at the ...
Kate Gardner reviews If I Am Right, and I Know I Am: Inge Lehmann, the Woman Who Discovered Earth’s Innermost Secret by Hanne Strager Enigmatic Inge Lehmann around the time she quit her job at Denmark ...
Harvard Physics professor John Huth was awarded the 2025 Lifetime Achievement Award by U.S. ATLAS, a group of American particle physicists working with the Large Hadron Collider at the European ...
University of Cambridge alumnus Professor John Clarke has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics, jointly with Michel H Devoret and John M Martinis, for their work revealing quantum physics in ...
The University of Cambridge congratulated its alumnus, John Clarke, for jointly winning the Nobel Prize in Physics for the year 2025. The Nobel winner, John Clarke, had completed his undergraduate ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results