skip to content

Communications

 

Making Rome great again: fake views in the ancient world

A political leader who seeks to make his nation “great again” and a time when ‘post-truth’ rhetoric appears to support political ambitions. Not Trump’s America, but Rome 2,000 years ago.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

The Electron Manifesto: transforming high performance computing with 'spintronics'

Electron ‘spin’ could hold the key to managing the world’s growing data demands without consuming huge amounts of energy. Now, researchers have shown that energy-efficient superconductors can power devices designed to achieve this. What once seemed an impossible marriage of superconductivity and spin may be about to...

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Target ‘best connected neighbours’ to stop spread of infection in developing countries

An innovative new study takes a network theory approach to targeted treatment in rural Africa, and finds that a simple algorithm may be more effective than current policies, as well as easier to deploy, when it comes to preventing disease spread – by finding those with “most connections to sick people”.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Archaeology shows there's more to millet than birdseed

Archaeological research shows that our prehistoric ancestors built resilience into their food supply. Now archaeologists say ‘forgotten’ millet – a cereal familiar today as birdseed – has a role to play in modern crop diversity and in helping to feed the world’s population.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Cambridge-led collaborations aim to tackle global food security and public health challenges

Two major research collaborations led by the University of Cambridge have been awarded almost £15 million in funding, the Minister of State for Universities and Science, Jo Johnson MP, announced today during a visit to Cambridge’s Sainsbury Laboratory.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Casting light on the dark ages: Anglo-Saxon fenland is re-imagined

What was life in the fens like in the period known as the dark ages? Archaeologist Susan Oosthuizen revisits the history of an iconic wetland in the light of fresh evidence and paints a compelling portrait of communities in tune with their changeable environment. In doing so, she makes an important contribution to a wider...

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Link identified between continental breakup, volcanic carbon emissions and evolution

Researchers have found that the formation and breakup of supercontinents over hundreds of millions of years controls volcanic carbon emissions. The results , reported in the journal Science, could lead to a reinterpretation of how the carbon cycle has evolved over Earth’s history, and how this has impacted the evolution of...

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Cambridge to host transatlantic cyber security competition

A major cyber security challenge, aimed at educating and inspiring the next generation of cyber defenders from across the UK and US, will be held at the University of Cambridge next week.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Silk “micrococoons” could be used in biotechnology and medicine

Researchers have manufactured microscopic versions of the cocoons spun by silkworms, which could be used to store sensitive proteins and other molecules for a wide range of uses.

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site

Open Cambridge 2017

See Cambridge’s newest district for the first time as part of the Open Cambridge weekend 2017

Read full article on cam.ac.uk site