High-definition electron microscopy and fluorescence imaging held centre stage at SU Imaging Day – a recurring event aimed to highlight and celebrate the open research facilities at Stockholm University.
Latest
The results of the annual measurements of the four Swedish reference glaciers' mass balance show that they have shrunk significantly. These are the largest losses since systematic measurements began.
Professor Gia Destouni, Department of Physical Geography at Stockholm University, has been honoured with the prestigious Baltic Sea Award for her groundbreaking research on eutrophication.
Gravitons, the quantum particles of gravity, were thought to be impossible to observe. Scientists have now worked out how they can be detected.
Securing the world's water supply is one of the greatest challenges of our time. Research is now presenting an alternative method for quantifying the global risk of water scarcity.
With the help of NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, an international team of researchers has found more black holes in the early universe than has previously been reported.