Features

Waiting for the big one

February 3, 2016
Many stars produce flares thousands of times more powerful than any we have seen on our own...so far. Which raises the question – could one of these potentially devastating 'superflares'...

The Great LIMS Challenge

January 28, 2016
Inventory problems, traceability issues and analysis mistakes – just some of the daily headaches facing lab managers across the land. So, can a LIMS really help with all this?

Getting to know the real you

January 21, 2016
Bacterial cells living within our bodies out number our ‘own’ cells – so just how seriously should we take the health of these internal aliens? Very, says Glenn Taylor; for...

Getting clingy: Synthetic glycopolymer hydrogels as substrates to test mucoadhesion

January 19, 2016
Researchers from the University of Reading have developed novel glycopolymer hydrogels that could be used in place of animal tissues in the evaluation of adhesion and retention of dosage forms.

Swimming out from an evolutionary shadow

January 14, 2016
We hear how the humble turtle has been problematic to classify correctly in an evolutionary context, and how hard work and a spot of luck has changed this…

Dark energy: the cosmic frontier

January 7, 2016
Seventeen years ago astronomers announced a remarkable observation – the Universe’s expansion is accelerating.

Three steps to fix the antibody market

January 5, 2016
Buyer beware may be a common adage, but purchasing antibodies has become a gamble, says Dr Jason Li.

How Sartorius have taken the leap and donated

December 31, 2015
As part of the Instrumental Access campaign we hear from one of the donor companies on why you and your company should join them in helping scientists in developing nations

Climbing to the cloud

December 18, 2015
Bioinformatics needs to change says Dr Thomas Connor and for that to happen we need to look to the cloud. Here he tells us about CLIMB – the world’s largest...

A fascinating act of cellular cannibalism

December 17, 2015
After a century of observing strange acts of cellular cannibalism, Jo Durgan and Oliver Florey tell us how close we are to understanding entosis, and what it may mean for...

The deep secrets of hotspot volcanoes

December 14, 2015
The improvements in geological seismic imaging techniques over the last 10 years have given us robust images of the deep mantle. But can they be used to settle a 40...

The venom that packs a punch for cancer

December 7, 2015
Animal venoms have exciting potential applications as new forms of chemotherapy that can attack cancerous cells. Dr Anders Aufderhorst-Roberts discusses his involvement in recent work aiming to understand the mechanism...

Pin It on Pinterest