Search Results for "Archive favourites"
To celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today Jan Freyberg, a PhD student in Vision at the University of Cambridge, tells us about an inspiring interdisciplinary study.
The physics of invisibility
publishingTo celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today Sebastien Guenneau, Director of Research at CNRS and member of the Editorial Board of Proceedings A, tells us about a very recent paper that builds on an exciting idea.
Making a splash with new techniques
publishingTo celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today Visakh Vaikuntanathan, a final year doctoral candidate in the department of Aerospace Engineering at the Indian Institute of Science, tells us about two highlights from the archive.
To celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive.
The phenomena of rupture and flow in solids
publishingProfessor John Knott FRS revisits some of his favourite papers from the field of fracture mechanics.
Reynolds at the dawn of fluid mechanics
publishingTo celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today P Henrik Alfredsson, Professor in Fluid Physics at the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, tells us about Osborne Reynolds’ drawings showing fluid flow.
Rumford – the colourful Count
publishingTo celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today Stephen Curry, Professor of Structural Biology at Imperial College, tells us about an interesting character in the Phil Trans history.
Meeting Mozart in London
publishingTo celebrate 350 years of scientific publishing, we are inviting our readers to tell us about their favourite papers from the Royal Society archive. Today Uta Frith, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development at UCL, tells us about a very unusual paper that caught her eye.