Intermediate-mass black holes are a void in black hole research, a mysterious missing-link between stellar-mass and supermassive black holes that...
New
Physicists have proposed a new mathematical model for a time machine. The research, published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, proposes...
From pain to extensive hormonal changes, the challenges women face during pregnancy are bountiful. However, dangers associated with premature births...
In the following, our writer, Aran Shaunak, imagines what a conversation between Freddie Mercury and his producer might have been...
Elon Musk’s company, SpaceX, yesterday outlined plans to start launching a constellation of satellites in 2019 that could provide affordable...
Imperial Festival, a free two-day event showcasing Imperial’s best science and creativity, themed around Robots, Superbugs, Health & Body, the...
From a young age, we’re taught that the world is full of opposites: black and white, good and evil, men...
The public are always open to songs written about aliens, space travel and other worlds. Perhaps it is by exploring...
Discoveries have shown that ionization from the sun is responsible for physics in the ionosphere. But the new NASA mission...
3D-printers have now become better than the best copyists and art renovators. The ethical pros and cons are telling a...
Several American medical societies are working together to educate the public on the health risks of climate change. The health...
A review of the Science Museum’s new VR experience – Space Descent VR with Tim Peake Last week I found...
In the fourth part of our Diary of a researcher series, Josh Greenslade gives us an insight in to what...
Sex work can be dangerous and detrimental to those who do it, but the stigma of sex work itself can...
Following on from the great feedback we received for using reader artwork in our last issue, Other Worlds, our Picture's Editor,...
Today the I,Science Spring 2017 issue, Taboo, was launched. In this issue, we explore a broad range of taboo topics...
Our author, Marcela Leite, went to the Guardian Live Robot Surgery at the Science Museum - and no, it doesn't...
The focus of the upcoming Spring 2017 issue of I,Science is taboo - from incest, to nudity, and all the...
With sea ice melt rates compounded by ever increasing temperature, it has been looking pretty gloomy for our planet. From...
Can scientists, academics, campaigners and communicators all work together to engage the public in taking action on climate change? It...
By Gaia Stucky de Quay and Jonathan Bosch Social media erupted with panic the day after Donald Trump officially walked in...
The ageing process is something which inevitably happens to all of us. Yet, the ability to postpone it has become...
I,Science caught up with Helen Sharman, the first Briton in space. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EpohoIns-c
Had a bad experience with an ex? Or perhaps embarrassed yourself in public today and wish you could erase all...
A recent study suggests the beginnings of Alzheimer’s disease might stretch back as far as the womb. The new research,...
In the third part of our Diary of a Researcher series, MSci physics student Meriame Berboucha tells us how the...
What is citizen science? How do you adapt citizen science projects for communities who can't read or write? What makes...
Ever thought about the ethics and philosophy behind our technological progress? Well, don’t worry if you haven’t! Our author Silvia...
Medical treatments are very different. So are people. PhD student Andris Piebalgs describes how finding the right treatment seems to...