- Photon-photon polaritons: the intriguing particles that emerge when two photons couple
- New galaxy sheds light on how stars form
- Milestone discovery in black hole research
- University spin-out, Ceryx Medical, secures £575k seed investment
- Bath collaboration aims to blitz infections with deep ultraviolet light
- Stack and twist physicists accelerate the hunt for revolutionary new materials
- A plot twist in pharmaceuticals: single nanoparticles could pave the way for medicines on demand
- Devices designed to test new Covid treatments are likely to be ready by August
- Nanodevices show how cells change with time by tracking from the inside
- Using AI to map marine environments
- Print your own laboratory grade microscope for 15
- Bath scientists join rapid response project to find treatments for Covid-19
- The collapse of magnetic fields in distant cosmic explosions: Is this what powers Gamma-Ray Bursts?
- Dialling up the heat on nanoparticles
- Cutting nanoparticles down to size
- Bionic pacemaker slows progression of heart failure
- Monitoring blood sugar levels through implantable sensor
- World first on-the-spot test for synthetic drug ‘spice’ developed at University of Bath
- Scientists illuminate secrets of a nanomaterial that is both twisted and untwisted at the same time
- Astronomers make first detection of polarised radio waves in Gamma Ray Burst Jets/
- Quantum computing boost from vapour stabilising technique
- Electrodes hot edges convert Co2 gas into fuels and chemicals
- New tunable nanomaterials possible via flexible process invented by University of Bath physicists
- Assembly in the air: using sound to defy gravity
- New physical effect demonstrated by University of Bath scientists after a 40 year search
- New materials could help improve the performance of solar cells
- Fastest supernova ever seen reveals earliest moments of a dying star
- Ultra-sensitive sensor with gold nanoparticle array
- Giant telescope array to explore extreme universe
- Bloodless revolution in diabetes monitoring
- 3D printed microscopes to boost science in developing countries
- Listening to icebergs on climate change
Department of Physics Research Archive
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