Shielding children from HIV
19 September 2008A novel method for preventing HIV transmission from mother to child has been devised with the help of a Cambridge University engineer.
Research
A novel method for preventing HIV transmission from mother to child has been devised with the help of a Cambridge University engineer.
David Baulcombe, the Professor of Botany at Cambridge University, is being honoured with the 2008 Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research for his discovery of...
The personalities of people in the USA often differ according to the state in which they live, a new study led by Cambridge University has...
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is being switched on today, marking one of the most important events in modern science.
Research at the Gordon Laboratory is opening up an important new area for the surface engineering of materials.
Because of their unique structure, biological tissues exhibit physical and mechanical properties that are unlike anything in the world of engineering.
Taking their cue from the building blocks of life, Cambridge chemists are assembling polymers that move.
Creating circuits from multiple components is routine in engineering. Can living systems be constructed using similar principles?
Cambridge’s new NanoPhotonics Centre is creating novel properties of light and matter at the nanoscale.
At the Cambridge Centre for Medical Materials, a highly interdisciplinary approach is meeting the challenge of bioengineering new materials for the human body.