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chemistry

Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology

Did The Romans Recycle?

We all know the Romans liked wine, but what happened to all the smashed glass when the party was over? Dr Victoria Sainsbury tells the story of what the Romans did with all their broken glass, and why archaeologists care about recycling.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Search for the Electron EDM Using Molecular Ions

4th and final lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 lecture series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Quantum Matter and Atomic Clocks

3rd lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

A Quantum Gas of Polar Molecules

2nd lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

General introduction - Control of Light: Frequency Comb Spectroscopy from IR to UXV

1st lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

An Outdoor Pause: Skipping Stones, Splashes (and some tea to conclude)

The 6th and final session of the Hinshelwood 2018 chemistry lecture series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Ski Friction and the Alchemy of Waxing

The 5th session of the 2018 Hinshelwood lecture series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

General introduction: Soft Interfaces and Scales Slippery Roads of Hydrodynamic Slippage

1st Lecture in the 2018 Hinshelwood lecture series, with Professor Lyderic Bocquet, Directeur de Recherche, CNRS, and Professor of Physics, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris.
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 6: Bioinspired Colloidal Assembly: From Photonics to Encryption

The sixth lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series.
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 5: Everything SLIPS: A New Concept in Anti-biofouling Materials

The fifth lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 4: Hydrophobicity, Superhydrophobicity, Omniphobicity and Slippery Surfaces

The fourth lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 3: Actuated "spiny" Surfaces a la Echinoderms: En Route for Adaptive Materials

The third lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series.
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 2: Rationally Designed Complex 3D Microarchitectures

The second lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series
The Hinshelwood Lectures: Bioinspired Materials

Lecture 1: Bio-inspired approaches to crystal design

The first lecture in the Hinshelwood lecture series.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

How do you turn an orange into a grapefruit?

Flavouring. It’s a global industry and here in Oxford a group of scientists are getting a ‘taste’ of the action by making natural flavours by manipulating enzymes.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

DMRG in Quantum Chemistry: From its relation to traditional methods to n-orbital density matrices and beyond

In my talk I will attempt to provide an overview on the application of the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) algorithm in quantum chemistry.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Learning' part 3 - Learning from Nature

How can Chemistry take inspiration from nature to create cleaner and more efficient ways of producing and using Hydrogen as a source of clean energy?
Department of Statistics

Bioinformatics at the heart of biology and genomics medicine

The Ninth annual Florence Nightingale Lecture, given by Professor Dame Janet Thornton, European Bioinformatics Institute, Cambridge. Held on Thursday 21st April 2016.
Oxford Sparks: bringing science to life

Shedding Light on the Situation

Light is more than just light bulbs and sunshine! Researchers at the University of Oxford use different types of light to learn more about all sorts of interesting things.
Christmas Science Lectures

Carrots, spiders and red salt – a fascination with light capture in biology

Using physics, chemistry and biology, the fascination with light capture in nature will be explained in a multi-coloured and animated well – prepare for six-eyed spiders, purple carrots and red salt.

Pagination

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