Elements in focus: helium
Helium: gas of awe, wonder, and worry. Is it time to give this noble gas the respect it deserves?
Showing 8 results from a total of 108
Helium: gas of awe, wonder, and worry. Is it time to give this noble gas the respect it deserves?
Motivate and engage your students with the interdisciplinary school projects run by the European Space Agency (ESA).
Would you know how to turn a bucket into a seismograph, how to make a scale model of a DNA double helix from cans and bottles, or how to simulate a human eye with the help of a shampoo bottle? Barbara Warmbein from the European Space Agency in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, finds out.
Stephen Parker from the European Commission describes a contest that demonstrates the truly astonishing achievements of some aspiring young scientists.
Autumn showers, shortening days, jet-lag… nothing could dampen the enthusiasm of teachers, students and journalists from around the world who took part in the Spanish and German Science on Stage events. Sonia Furtado reports.
Marine biologist Jean-Luc Solandt tells Karin Ranero Celius about his commitment to study and preserve one of the world’s biggest treasures: the ocean.
Petra Nieckchen from EFDA reports on the 23rd European Union Contest for Young Scientists (EUCYS) in Helsinki, Finland.
In the fifth and final article in this series on astronomy and the electromagnetic spectrum, find out how scientists use the European Space Agency’s missions to observe the sky in far-infrared, sub-millimetre and microwave light.
Elements in focus: helium
Back to School with ESA
Science teachers take centre stage
Something special in the air
Science on Stage: recent international events
Jean-Luc Solandt: diving into marine conservation
Camp of brilliant brains
More than meets the eye: the cold and the distant Universe