The Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) is a UK government agency that carries out research in science and engineering, and funds UK research in areas including particle physics, nuclear physics, space science and astronomy (both ground-based and space-based).
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Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) Research
- Tickets Alert: Harwell Campus science open day
This is outside London, but for the first time in eight years, the large Harwell science campus near Didcot will have a free open day for the public to wander around and see what happens here.
- Seatrium and Singapore Institute of Technology Establish Digital Learning Lab for Industrial Learning & Research Collaboration
Seatrium Limited (Seatrium, or the Group) and the Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT), Singapore’s first University of Applied Learning, have entered a transformative partnership to pave the way ...
- Researchers Achieve Most Precise Measurement Yet of Expanding Universe
The analysis, based on the largest 3D map of the cosmos ever created with just the first year of data from DESI, confirms the basics of our current best model of the universe – with some tantalising ...
- One Of Universe's Most Powerful Magnets Has Awoken - Our Theories Can't Explain It
In two new pieces of research published in Nature Astronomy, we used three of the world's largest radio telescopes to capture a host of never before seen changes in the radio waves emitted by one of ...
- We saw one of the most powerful magnets in the Universe come to life – and our theories can’t quite explain it
Gregory Desvignes received funding from European Research Council (ERC) Synergy Grant “BlackHoleCam” Grant Agreement Number 610058. Patrick Weltevrede receives funding from Science and Technology ...
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Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) Discovery
- One Of Universe's Most Powerful Magnets Has Awoken - Our Theories Can't Explain It
The discovery of the slight wobble and the circular polarisation in the radio emission of XTE J1810-197 represents an exciting leap forwards in how we can study the outbursts of radio-loud magnetars.
- We saw one of the most powerful magnets in the Universe come to life – and our theories can’t quite explain it
Patrick Weltevrede receives funding from Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). Marcus Lower does not work for ... simple theories aren’t designed to account for. The discovery of the ...