2014-2015
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2014-2015
- Advanced geomechanics: hot, dehydrated and shaken
- The dark net: inside the digital underworld
- Going brown or getting greener?
- Good vibes on the internet of things
- Hackers at the dinner table
- How is Antarctica changing and why should we care?
- How the genomics of TB is changing our view of the human immune system
- Modelling the molecules of life
- Playing the quantum field
- Shedding new light on Schrödinger’s cat
- Sparse signal processing: Occam in the age of abundance
- Systemic risk: a challenge for mathematical modelling
- Towards a silent aircraft
- U+life: the era of microchip medicine
- Vascular rheumatology: a journey from East Acton to East Asia
Professor Lidija Zdravkovic (Civil and Environmental Engineering) discusses how her work developing computational models of soils helps the construction industry when considering complex construction projects, such as The Shard or Crossrail.
Cyber expert Jamie Bartlett explores dark internet subcultures, hidden encrypted websites, and the people behind them, in the 2014 Vincent Briscoe Lecture.
Find out about the effect of the Earth’s vegetation and soils in the rate of climate change with Professor Jon Lloyd (Life Sciences).
Learn how scientists study the properties of fungi to design disease-resistant crops and protect our food supply from Professor Pietro Spanu (Life Sciences).
Professor Martin Siegert, Co-Director of the Grantham Institute, describes our fascination with Antarctica and the global implications of the continent’s melting ice-shelves.
Professor Anne O’Garra (NHLI) discusses her work understanding the different indicators of latent and active TB based on genetic analysis.
2013 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry and Stanford professor, Michael Levitt, describes the origins of computational structural biology and future applications for the technology.
Professor Arttu Rajantie (Physics) explains what we mean by quantum fields and why they are so important in understanding the earliest moments of the Universe.
2012 Physics Nobel Laureate, Professor Serge Haroche, discusses how quantum theory has allowed us to better understand the subatomic world, and led to revolutionary technologies including computers, lasers and atomic clocks.
Professor Pier Luigi Dragotti (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) discusses how analogue signals can be efficiently and effectively converted to digital signals by the principle of 'Occam's razor'.
Professor Rama Cont (Mathematics) illustrates how mathematical models can contribute to the understanding of systemic risk and examines the link between the structure of the financial system and its stability.
Professor Dame Ann Dowling, President of the Royal Society of Engineering, describes her career combining engineering research into aircraft noise with industrial practice.
Regius Professor of Engineering Chris Toumazou (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) looks at advances in healthcare using semiconductors and microchips in the treatment of chronic diseases.
Discover how the National Heart and Lung Institute’s Professor Justin Mason developed an interest in vascular rheumatology and is working to improve the lives of cardiovascular patients.