More features – Page 46

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    Better, stronger, faster

    2007-03-28T11:38:15Z

    Now we have bionic eyes and limbs, and chemists are creating artificial bodily tissues to rival nature's own, as Jon Evans discovers

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    Chemistry for the common good

    2007-03-01T10:46:30Z

    Marcellin Berthelot was a man of many talents, combining ground breaking chemical research with a busy and successful political career, as Mike Sutton finds out

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    The terahertz gap: into the dead zone

    2007-03-01T10:36:00Z

    New materials are opening up applications for terahertz radiation in the physical, biological and medical sciences. Joe McEntee reports

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    The one-stop science shop

    2007-03-01T10:34:59Z

    From mass spectrometers to lab reagents, the newly formed Thermo Fisher Scientific sells it all.

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    Riding the RAE rollercoaster

    2007-02-28T15:14:32Z

    UK academics will soon be bracing themselves for the 2008 research assessment exercise, the last of its kind before a hotly debated metrics system takes over.

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    Picture perfect

    2007-01-29T13:26:23Z

    Medical imaging now promises to take us to the molecular level, thanks to new, powerful MRI machines and clever contrast agents, as David Bradley finds out

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    Solidarity in science

    2007-01-29T13:17:41Z

    Jerzy Buzek helped fight communism in Poland before becoming its prime minister. Arthur Rogers meets this multi-faceted character

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    Fries to go

    2007-01-29T11:41:02Z

    Five years after acrylamide's discovery in foods, industry is still hard at work trying to cut levels of the potential carcinogen in convenience products. Emma Davies investigates

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    Living on credits

    2007-01-29T11:37:37Z

    One way to tackle global warming is to give people a 'carbon ration' that limits their emission of greenhouse gases. Helen Pilcher reports

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    A Diamond investment

    2006-12-20T12:07:42Z

    This month sees the UK's Diamond Light Source open its doors to bands of researchers eager to make the most of its synchrotron radiation. Susan Aldridge investigates what Diamond has to offer

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    Life's cartographer

    2006-12-20T12:07:00Z

    The metabolic pathways chart is one of the most enduring icons of the biochemical sciences, illustrating how all the biochemical cycles relate to each other. The chart was created by Donald Nicholson, who continues to work on it at the age of 90. Here, he

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    Science across frontiers

    2006-12-20T11:53:49Z

    The European Research Council officially comes to life this month, promising to fund basic research and to move away from an EU focus on multi-centre collaborations. Arthur Rogers finds out more

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    Treasures from the deep

    2006-12-20T11:00:00Z

    Mining companies are exploring underwater volcanic vents, hoping to extract metals such as gold and copper. Victoria Gill looks at the technical, environmental and political hurdles

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    Chemistry in Africa

    2006-11-28T12:46:37Z

    Science is playing an increasingly important role in sub-Saharan Africa. A number of new initiatives and organisations are helping to promote chemistry in education and industry, as Helen Carmichael finds out

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    From here to Bologna

    2006-11-28T12:46:33Z

    The Bologna process promises to create a unified education system in 45 countries by 2010. Is this an achievable goal? Terry Mitchell reports

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    A change in focus

    2006-11-28T12:46:26Z

    David Brennan, chief executive officer of pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca, is taking the company on a new course towards biologic drugs.

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    Microfluidics: wet and potentially wild

    2006-11-28T11:53:14Z

    Lab-on-a-chip technology is finally seeing widespread use in analysis and synthesis. Jon Evans catches up with the progress of microfluidics research

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    Fat of the land

    2006-11-28T11:40:50Z

    As we become progressively more rotund, our body chemistry undergoes critical changes that have a major impact on our health. Dennis Rouvray sizes up this burgeoning problem

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    Small but scary?

    2006-10-30T10:49:56Z

    Will there ever be a major nanotechnology health scare? Researchers are investigating the potential risks posed by nanoparticles in a bid to pre-empt any health scares that could prove fatal to the industry. Jon Evans reports

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    Old King Coal

    2006-10-30T10:49:54Z

    Clean coal technology is heralding a greener future for the once dirty energy source. Andrew West investigates the clean coal options