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College of Science students win the Swansea heat of FameLab 2017 Two College of Science students went through to the FameLab regional round after winning the Swansea heats of the science communication competition.
Elizabeth Evans and Chloe Robinson, both PhD students, talked on “Debunking a few earthquake myths” and “eDNA: Catching Critters via Molecular Footprint.”
FameLab is a communications competition designed to engage and entertain by breaking down science, technology and engineering concepts into three minute presentations.
Contestants from around the world take part armed only with their wits and a few props – the result is unpredictable and to encourage everyone taking part to find out about the latest research.
From left to right: Professor Matt Jones, Chloe Robinson and Elizabeth Evans.
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Physics students get the CERN experience A group of students from the Department of Physics recently visited CERN, the largest particle physics laboratory in the world.
During their stay, the group met with Professor Niels Madsen, one of the physicists from Swansea University who is heavily involved with antimatter research. The students were shown around the antimatter factory followed by a presentation by professor Madsen on the science behind his work.
They also had the opportunity to attend a presentation on the particle accelerators.
But the trip wasn’t all work - the group managed to squeeze in time for a game of darts, a visit to the famous jet d’eau and a traditional cheese fondue tasting session! |
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Oriel Science shares research with the local community Oriel Science is a public-facing exhibition and outreach teaching space showcasing exhibitions based on research from Swansea University’s College of Science.
Oriel Science is excited to announce having over 10,000 visitors since September 2016 with over 60% of visitors having never visited either campus. This is an exciting on-going opportunity for Swansea University’s College of Science to interact and share research with the local community like never before. With school visits giving access to hundreds of students year 3 and above, Oriel science can help staff meet the needs of public engagement projects.
Oriel Science opens on weekends and over half-terms, taking snapshots of University research, crafting them into compelling exhibits with the aim to engage, educate and enthuse. The current exhibition theme is The Story of Time, showcasing everything from glacial calving to a half-term sci-fi talk from Erik Stengler – with the DeLorean by the front door!
Oriel Science hosted the launch of the Young Scientist Journal Hub with students from the Talent Bank at Gower College in January and has also been featured on The Wave following the excitement of the British Science Festival.
With access to such a far-reaching audience, Oriel Science exhibitions can help deliver your project’s impact agenda, in an exciting, engaging and unique space. |
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Congratulations to Dr Sean Walton, Department of Computer Science, who was recently awarded a Ser Cymru Fellowship. Sean will be working closely with Rolls Royce using data from 3-dimensional scans which will help in the development of components which could reduce the fuel consumption of aircraft.
Ser Cymru promotes the expertise that exists in Welsh academia. Sean joins a number of other academics across the College of Science who have also been awarded this prestigious fellowship.
Sean is pictured middle row, third from the left. |
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The 'Research as Art' Competition 2017 is now open with a deadline of 8th April 2017. Research as Art gives the researcher, member of staff or student, an opportunity to capture the humanity and beauty of your research with both an image and a short narrative.
The competition is open to all staff and researchers from undergraduate to professor; studying, working or supporting research in any field or discipline. This includes Arts and Humanities, Engineering, Human and Health Sciences, Law, Medicine, Science and Management. Everything!
Image: “From anonymity to personality” by Gaelle Fehlmann, Department of Biosciences |
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Professor Marcus Doel, Department of Geography, presented a critique at the University of Tokyo, Japan earlier this year.
Professor Doel’s critique focussed on the notion of the ‘Anthropocene’, which supposedly heralds the fact that humanity has fundamentally altered the functioning of the Earth system and has thereby entered a new geological epoch of its own making.
The critique will be published in the book Earth Shatters: The Deleuzian Anthropocene, edited by Arun Saldanha and Hannah Stark, towards the end of the year. |
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Mathematicians on the move! Dr Gibin Powathil has recently visited Tsinghua Sanya International Mathematical Forum, Sanya, China as an invited participant and speaker in a week long Mathematical Modelling and Computation in Medicine/Biology Workshop and delivered a lecture on his recent research in Mathematical Oncology.
This workshop aimed to bring together an international group of mathematicians, computational and biomedical scientists working in the interdisciplinary field of mathematics, scientific computing and medicine/biology to exchange ideas on topics spanning a broad spectrum of problems of current and emerging interests in biology and medicine.
For the spring of 2017 the Mittag-Leffler Institute has been running a semester of research activities in the area of Motivic Homotopy Theory, and the organisers invited Dr Grigory Garkusha to join them in January and February. Experts from around the world will join together in this beautiful (but rather cold) location to collaborate and discuss their latest findings.
Dr Vitaly Moroz was a visiting professor in Osaka Prefecture University (Japan) for four weeks in December 2016 – January 2017.
The research visit took place in the framework of the Special Guest Professor Programme where leading researchers and educators are invited to OPU throughout the year to conduct special lectures, seminars, and individual discussions with faculty and students. Vitaly gave two lecture courses for postgraduate and undergraduate students. The visit also incorporated two research seminars on the topics of his research and as well as participation in a research workshop at Tohoku University (Sendai) and a number of fruitful research discussions with colleagues working in the area of nonlinear PDEs. Possibilities for future student and staff exchanges between Swansea and OPU were explored. |
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Mathematician visits Australia In November 2016, Dr Elaine Crooks, Mathematics (far right), gave an invited talk at the `International conference on nonlinear partial differential equations: A celebration of Professor Norman Dancer’s 70th birthday’ that was held at the University of New England in Armidale, Australia. Professor Dancer (second from the right) is a Swansea University Distinguished Research Professor and Emeritus Professor at the University of Sydney. Elaine’s presentation in Armidale was on the topic of invasion speeds in competition-diffusion models with mutation and based on joint work with Dr Luca Börger, Department of Biosciences, and Aled Morris, Department of Mathematics, who is currently working on an interdisciplinary PhD. Her trip to Australia also included a research visit to the University of Sydney to pursue a collaborative project with Professor Dancer and Dr Daniel Hauer, University of Sydney, on strong competition limits of competition-diffusion systems. |
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Mathematics hosts a 2-day international workshop on Mathematical Medicine and Pharmacology The Department of Mathematics hosted a 2-day workshop on Mathematical Medicine and Pharmacology from 2 to 3 February 2017. The topics of the workshop spanned on a broad spectrum of problems of current interest in oncology, pharmacology and cardiac modelling, and invited talks were delivered by several national and international experts in these research areas. This multidisciplinary workshop brought together more than 30 researchers from the UK and abroad, drawn from a variety of disciplines including mathematics, experimental biology, medicine, and engineering, to discuss some of the key problems and challenges in medicine and pharmacology where modelling can be of great help.
This was the 1st session of the BioMathematics@Swansea 2017 event, organised under the umbrella of the Centre for Biomathematics, Swansea University. The organisers of the workshop were Gibin Powathil, Lloyd Bridge, and Elaine Crooks from Mathematics. More information and abstracts of the talks can be found at the webpage: https://mathmedworkshop1.wordpress.com/. The 2nd session of BioMathematics@Swansea 2017 will focus on Mathematical Ecology and take place on 27th-28th April 2017. These events are generously supported by an LMS conference grant, the Swansea University College of Science, and the EPSRC-funded network POEMS (Predictive mOdelling for hEalthcare through MathS). |
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Before coming to Swansea, Nelly spent 4 years at the Johann Radon Institute for Computational and Applied Mathematics (RICAM), Austrian Academy of Sciences as a postdoctoral researcher in the Symbolic Computation group in Linz, Austria. Nelly did her bachelor studies in Mathematics at the National University of Colombia, Bogota, and her Master degree at the Leiden University, the Netherlands and at the University of Bordeaux, France. Nelly wrote her PhD thesis at Oslo University, Norway, 2013. Her research interests are applied algebraic geometry, and commutative algebra, in particular, their applications for solving problems arising in Geometric Modelling and Computer Aided Geometric Design (CAGD).
Nelly is currently teaching Groups and Rings to Year 2 (FHEQ Level 5). |
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