-
Royal Society University Research Fellowship Scheme
Find out more about our scheme for outstanding scientists who are in the early stages of their research career and have the potential to become leaders in their field.
For more information - https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/grants/university-research/
published: 23 Jul 2018
-
Dr. Gagandeep Kang: First Indian Female Fellow of Royal Society | Hindi | Priyank Singhvi
In my previous video, I had narrated the problems with research being carried out in India. One of the problems was not to work on Indian problems. But this time Dr. Gagandeep Kang, executive director of THSTI, Faridabad, has been elected as a fellow of Royal Society. She is the first and only female Indian in the history of the establishment of Royal Society. Her extensive research to solve the Indian children's health challenges due to rotavirus has paved the ways for future therapies. Congratulations on her achievement and all the very best for future endeavours.
अपने पिछले वीडियो में, मैंने भारत में किए जा रहे अनुसंधानों के साथ समस्याएं बताई थीं। समस्याओं में से एक भारतीय समस्याओं पर काम नहीं करना था। लेकिन इस बार टीएचएसटीआई, फरीदाबाद के कार्यकारी निदेशक डॉ। गगनदीप कंग को रॉयल सोसाइट...
published: 25 Apr 2019
-
Thanos can't actually snap his fingers | The Royal Society
#shorts
Thanos could not snap his fingers in the infinity gauntlet, according to scientists. Fingertips produce a Goldilocks zone of friction to create the perfect snap. Too much or too little friction and it doesn’t work. The team from Georgia Tech also discovered that the finger snap is the fastest motion the human body is capable of producing. It was previously thought pitching a baseball was fastest.
The research was published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. You can read the full article here: https://bit.ly/3DvebEP
The Royal Society is a Fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists and is the oldest scientific academy in continuous existence: https://royalsociety.org/
Subscribe to our channel for exciting science videos and live events, many hosted by B...
published: 17 Nov 2021
-
Prof. Geordie Williamson (Youngest member of Royal Society, e.g. Einstein, Newton) - The Project
Australian maths professor Geordie Williamson chats to Hamish Macdonald on ch10 "The Project" about his beautiful mind.
Geordie Williamson is the youngest member of Royal Society, which include members such as Albert Einstein and Issac Newton.
Geordie won the New Horizons Mathematics Prize valued at USD$100,000, the Clay Research Award, the European Mathematical Society Prize and the Chevalley Prize of the American Mathematical Society.
Geordie was originally from a small town called Bowral, Southern Highlands, NSW. Where he also did the highest high school maths (4 unit) at Chevalier College.
published: 31 May 2018
-
What is the RSA?
What on earth is the RSA, and what does it do? Everyone’s favourite hairy hand (and proud RSA Fellow!) Andrew Park explains all with his trusty black pen.
Narrated by George the Poet (another Fellow!)
Want to support our work and become a Fellow yourself? https://www.thersa.org/fellowship/what-is-fellowship/
Follow the RSA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RSAEvents
Like the RSA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theRSAorg
Listen to RSA podcasts: https://www.mixcloud.com/RSA/
See RSA Events behind the scenes: https://instagram.com/rsa_events/
published: 03 Nov 2015
-
Professor Jonathon Pines elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society
Professor Jonathon Pines, head of the division of Cancer Biology at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, has been elected as a Fellow of the prestigious Royal Society.
Here, he explains why his election is such an honour for a UK scientist, details his area of research and describes the opportunities at the ICR for furthering cancer research.
Read the full story: https://www.icr.ac.uk/news-archive/eminent-cancer-researchers-elected-to-royal-society-fellowship
published: 29 Apr 2016
-
Founding the Royal Society (Part 1)
A documentary about the founding of the royal society, focusing on the mathematicians involved. (Part 1)
published: 03 Nov 2010
-
Patricia Schulte | 2019 Fellow of The Royal Society of Canada | The University of British Columbia
Patricia Schulte is a world-leading authority in evolutionary physiology. She is internationally recognized for her work linking genomics, epigenomics, biochemistry and physiology to assess the performance of fishes in a changing environment. Her pioneering work on the molecular mechanisms that underlie inter-individual
variation in resilience to environmental change has had significant implications for both the conservation of natural fish populations and aquaculture in a changing world.
----------------------------------------------------
Patricia Schulte est une spécialiste mondiale dans la physiologie évolutive. Elle est reconnue internationalement pour ses travaux associant la génomique, l’épigénomique, la biochimie et la physiologie a n d’évaluer l’évolution des poissons dans...
published: 31 Jul 2020
-
UCD Professor Kenneth Wolfe elected Fellow of the Royal Society
Professor of Genomic Evolution, UCD School of Medicine and UCD Conway Institute, University College Dublin
Founded in 1663, the Royal Society has played a part in some of the most fundamental, significant, and life-changing discoveries in scientific history.
It published Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica, and Benjamin Franklin’s kite experiment demonstrating the electrical nature of lightning. It also backed James Cook’s journey to Tahiti, reaching Australia and New Zealand, to track the Transit of Venus.
The Royal Society's motto "Nullius in verba" is taken to mean "take nobody's word for it". It is an expression of the determination of Fellows to withstand the domination of authority and to verify all statements by an appeal to facts determined by experiment.
The leading scientifi...
published: 05 May 2017
-
Indiatimes - First Indian Woman Scientist Fellow of Royal Society
Gagandeep Kang enters Royal society of London as FIRST INDIAN scientist fellow. Congratulations for making history! 🙌
For more videos, stay tuned to Indiatimes!
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/indiatimes
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/indiatimesinsta/
Tweet to us: https://twitter.com/indiatimes
published: 19 Apr 2019
1:44
Royal Society University Research Fellowship Scheme
Find out more about our scheme for outstanding scientists who are in the early stages of their research career and have the potential to become leaders in their...
Find out more about our scheme for outstanding scientists who are in the early stages of their research career and have the potential to become leaders in their field.
For more information - https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/grants/university-research/
https://wn.com/Royal_Society_University_Research_Fellowship_Scheme
Find out more about our scheme for outstanding scientists who are in the early stages of their research career and have the potential to become leaders in their field.
For more information - https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/grants/university-research/
- published: 23 Jul 2018
- views: 14988
5:58
Dr. Gagandeep Kang: First Indian Female Fellow of Royal Society | Hindi | Priyank Singhvi
In my previous video, I had narrated the problems with research being carried out in India. One of the problems was not to work on Indian problems. But this tim...
In my previous video, I had narrated the problems with research being carried out in India. One of the problems was not to work on Indian problems. But this time Dr. Gagandeep Kang, executive director of THSTI, Faridabad, has been elected as a fellow of Royal Society. She is the first and only female Indian in the history of the establishment of Royal Society. Her extensive research to solve the Indian children's health challenges due to rotavirus has paved the ways for future therapies. Congratulations on her achievement and all the very best for future endeavours.
अपने पिछले वीडियो में, मैंने भारत में किए जा रहे अनुसंधानों के साथ समस्याएं बताई थीं। समस्याओं में से एक भारतीय समस्याओं पर काम नहीं करना था। लेकिन इस बार टीएचएसटीआई, फरीदाबाद के कार्यकारी निदेशक डॉ। गगनदीप कंग को रॉयल सोसाइटी का साथी चुना गया है। वह रॉयल सोसाइटी की स्थापना के इतिहास में पहली और एकमात्र महिला भारतीय हैं। रोटावायरस के कारण भारतीय बच्चों की स्वास्थ्य चुनौतियों को हल करने के लिए उनके व्यापक शोध ने भविष्य के उपचारों के लिए मार्ग प्रशस्त किया है। उनकी उपलब्धि पर बधाई और भविष्य के प्रयासों के लिए बहुत बहुत शुभकामनाएं।
References:
http://thsti.res.in/profile/Gagandeep-Kang
https://royalsociety.org/people/gagandeep-kang-14102/
Videomaker, editor and narrator: Priyank Singhvi
Find us more on:
www.facebook.com/beingscientist.17
www.facebook.com/biotechnology.22
https://wn.com/Dr._Gagandeep_Kang_First_Indian_Female_Fellow_Of_Royal_Society_|_Hindi_|_Priyank_Singhvi
In my previous video, I had narrated the problems with research being carried out in India. One of the problems was not to work on Indian problems. But this time Dr. Gagandeep Kang, executive director of THSTI, Faridabad, has been elected as a fellow of Royal Society. She is the first and only female Indian in the history of the establishment of Royal Society. Her extensive research to solve the Indian children's health challenges due to rotavirus has paved the ways for future therapies. Congratulations on her achievement and all the very best for future endeavours.
अपने पिछले वीडियो में, मैंने भारत में किए जा रहे अनुसंधानों के साथ समस्याएं बताई थीं। समस्याओं में से एक भारतीय समस्याओं पर काम नहीं करना था। लेकिन इस बार टीएचएसटीआई, फरीदाबाद के कार्यकारी निदेशक डॉ। गगनदीप कंग को रॉयल सोसाइटी का साथी चुना गया है। वह रॉयल सोसाइटी की स्थापना के इतिहास में पहली और एकमात्र महिला भारतीय हैं। रोटावायरस के कारण भारतीय बच्चों की स्वास्थ्य चुनौतियों को हल करने के लिए उनके व्यापक शोध ने भविष्य के उपचारों के लिए मार्ग प्रशस्त किया है। उनकी उपलब्धि पर बधाई और भविष्य के प्रयासों के लिए बहुत बहुत शुभकामनाएं।
References:
http://thsti.res.in/profile/Gagandeep-Kang
https://royalsociety.org/people/gagandeep-kang-14102/
Videomaker, editor and narrator: Priyank Singhvi
Find us more on:
www.facebook.com/beingscientist.17
www.facebook.com/biotechnology.22
- published: 25 Apr 2019
- views: 5980
0:30
Thanos can't actually snap his fingers | The Royal Society
#shorts
Thanos could not snap his fingers in the infinity gauntlet, according to scientists. Fingertips produce a Goldilocks zone of friction to create the perf...
#shorts
Thanos could not snap his fingers in the infinity gauntlet, according to scientists. Fingertips produce a Goldilocks zone of friction to create the perfect snap. Too much or too little friction and it doesn’t work. The team from Georgia Tech also discovered that the finger snap is the fastest motion the human body is capable of producing. It was previously thought pitching a baseball was fastest.
The research was published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. You can read the full article here: https://bit.ly/3DvebEP
The Royal Society is a Fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists and is the oldest scientific academy in continuous existence: https://royalsociety.org/
Subscribe to our channel for exciting science videos and live events, many hosted by Brian Cox, our Professor for Public Engagement: https://www.youtube.com/royalsociety?sub_confirmation=1
We’re also on Twitter https://twitter.com/royalsociety
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theroyalsociety/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theroyalsociety/
And LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-royal-society
https://wn.com/Thanos_Can't_Actually_Snap_His_Fingers_|_The_Royal_Society
#shorts
Thanos could not snap his fingers in the infinity gauntlet, according to scientists. Fingertips produce a Goldilocks zone of friction to create the perfect snap. Too much or too little friction and it doesn’t work. The team from Georgia Tech also discovered that the finger snap is the fastest motion the human body is capable of producing. It was previously thought pitching a baseball was fastest.
The research was published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. You can read the full article here: https://bit.ly/3DvebEP
The Royal Society is a Fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists and is the oldest scientific academy in continuous existence: https://royalsociety.org/
Subscribe to our channel for exciting science videos and live events, many hosted by Brian Cox, our Professor for Public Engagement: https://www.youtube.com/royalsociety?sub_confirmation=1
We’re also on Twitter https://twitter.com/royalsociety
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theroyalsociety/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theroyalsociety/
And LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-royal-society
- published: 17 Nov 2021
- views: 7601
4:18
Prof. Geordie Williamson (Youngest member of Royal Society, e.g. Einstein, Newton) - The Project
Australian maths professor Geordie Williamson chats to Hamish Macdonald on ch10 "The Project" about his beautiful mind.
Geordie Williamson is the youngest memb...
Australian maths professor Geordie Williamson chats to Hamish Macdonald on ch10 "The Project" about his beautiful mind.
Geordie Williamson is the youngest member of Royal Society, which include members such as
Albert Einstein and Issac Newton.
Geordie won the New Horizons Mathematics Prize valued at USD$100,000, the Clay Research Award, the European Mathematical Society Prize and the Chevalley Prize of the American Mathematical Society.
Geordie was originally from a small town called Bowral, Southern Highlands, NSW. Where he also did the highest high school maths (4 unit) at Chevalier College.
https://wn.com/Prof._Geordie_Williamson_(Youngest_Member_Of_Royal_Society,_E.G._Einstein,_Newton)_The_Project
Australian maths professor Geordie Williamson chats to Hamish Macdonald on ch10 "The Project" about his beautiful mind.
Geordie Williamson is the youngest member of Royal Society, which include members such as
Albert Einstein and Issac Newton.
Geordie won the New Horizons Mathematics Prize valued at USD$100,000, the Clay Research Award, the European Mathematical Society Prize and the Chevalley Prize of the American Mathematical Society.
Geordie was originally from a small town called Bowral, Southern Highlands, NSW. Where he also did the highest high school maths (4 unit) at Chevalier College.
- published: 31 May 2018
- views: 3730
2:35
What is the RSA?
What on earth is the RSA, and what does it do? Everyone’s favourite hairy hand (and proud RSA Fellow!) Andrew Park explains all with his trusty black pen.
Narr...
What on earth is the RSA, and what does it do? Everyone’s favourite hairy hand (and proud RSA Fellow!) Andrew Park explains all with his trusty black pen.
Narrated by George the Poet (another Fellow!)
Want to support our work and become a Fellow yourself? https://www.thersa.org/fellowship/what-is-fellowship/
Follow the RSA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RSAEvents
Like the RSA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theRSAorg
Listen to RSA podcasts: https://www.mixcloud.com/RSA/
See RSA Events behind the scenes: https://instagram.com/rsa_events/
https://wn.com/What_Is_The_Rsa
What on earth is the RSA, and what does it do? Everyone’s favourite hairy hand (and proud RSA Fellow!) Andrew Park explains all with his trusty black pen.
Narrated by George the Poet (another Fellow!)
Want to support our work and become a Fellow yourself? https://www.thersa.org/fellowship/what-is-fellowship/
Follow the RSA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RSAEvents
Like the RSA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theRSAorg
Listen to RSA podcasts: https://www.mixcloud.com/RSA/
See RSA Events behind the scenes: https://instagram.com/rsa_events/
- published: 03 Nov 2015
- views: 169201
2:04
Professor Jonathon Pines elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society
Professor Jonathon Pines, head of the division of Cancer Biology at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, has been elected as a Fellow of the prestigious Ro...
Professor Jonathon Pines, head of the division of Cancer Biology at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, has been elected as a Fellow of the prestigious Royal Society.
Here, he explains why his election is such an honour for a UK scientist, details his area of research and describes the opportunities at the ICR for furthering cancer research.
Read the full story: https://www.icr.ac.uk/news-archive/eminent-cancer-researchers-elected-to-royal-society-fellowship
https://wn.com/Professor_Jonathon_Pines_Elected_As_A_Fellow_Of_The_Royal_Society
Professor Jonathon Pines, head of the division of Cancer Biology at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, has been elected as a Fellow of the prestigious Royal Society.
Here, he explains why his election is such an honour for a UK scientist, details his area of research and describes the opportunities at the ICR for furthering cancer research.
Read the full story: https://www.icr.ac.uk/news-archive/eminent-cancer-researchers-elected-to-royal-society-fellowship
- published: 29 Apr 2016
- views: 2127
12:12
Founding the Royal Society (Part 1)
A documentary about the founding of the royal society, focusing on the mathematicians involved. (Part 1)
A documentary about the founding of the royal society, focusing on the mathematicians involved. (Part 1)
https://wn.com/Founding_The_Royal_Society_(Part_1)
A documentary about the founding of the royal society, focusing on the mathematicians involved. (Part 1)
- published: 03 Nov 2010
- views: 36351
1:00
Patricia Schulte | 2019 Fellow of The Royal Society of Canada | The University of British Columbia
Patricia Schulte is a world-leading authority in evolutionary physiology. She is internationally recognized for her work linking genomics, epigenomics, biochemi...
Patricia Schulte is a world-leading authority in evolutionary physiology. She is internationally recognized for her work linking genomics, epigenomics, biochemistry and physiology to assess the performance of fishes in a changing environment. Her pioneering work on the molecular mechanisms that underlie inter-individual
variation in resilience to environmental change has had significant implications for both the conservation of natural fish populations and aquaculture in a changing world.
----------------------------------------------------
Patricia Schulte est une spécialiste mondiale dans la physiologie évolutive. Elle est reconnue internationalement pour ses travaux associant la génomique, l’épigénomique, la biochimie et la physiologie a n d’évaluer l’évolution des poissons dans un environnement changeant. Ses travaux novateurs sur les mécanismes moléculaires sous-tendant les variations interindividuelles de la résilience aux changements environnementaux ont eu des implications importantes pour la conservation des populations naturelles des poissons et pour l’aquaculture dans un monde en mutation.
https://wn.com/Patricia_Schulte_|_2019_Fellow_Of_The_Royal_Society_Of_Canada_|_The_University_Of_British_Columbia
Patricia Schulte is a world-leading authority in evolutionary physiology. She is internationally recognized for her work linking genomics, epigenomics, biochemistry and physiology to assess the performance of fishes in a changing environment. Her pioneering work on the molecular mechanisms that underlie inter-individual
variation in resilience to environmental change has had significant implications for both the conservation of natural fish populations and aquaculture in a changing world.
----------------------------------------------------
Patricia Schulte est une spécialiste mondiale dans la physiologie évolutive. Elle est reconnue internationalement pour ses travaux associant la génomique, l’épigénomique, la biochimie et la physiologie a n d’évaluer l’évolution des poissons dans un environnement changeant. Ses travaux novateurs sur les mécanismes moléculaires sous-tendant les variations interindividuelles de la résilience aux changements environnementaux ont eu des implications importantes pour la conservation des populations naturelles des poissons et pour l’aquaculture dans un monde en mutation.
- published: 31 Jul 2020
- views: 148
3:31
UCD Professor Kenneth Wolfe elected Fellow of the Royal Society
Professor of Genomic Evolution, UCD School of Medicine and UCD Conway Institute, University College Dublin
Founded in 1663, the Royal Society has played a part...
Professor of Genomic Evolution, UCD School of Medicine and UCD Conway Institute, University College Dublin
Founded in 1663, the Royal Society has played a part in some of the most fundamental, significant, and life-changing discoveries in scientific history.
It published Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica, and Benjamin Franklin’s kite experiment demonstrating the electrical nature of lightning. It also backed James Cook’s journey to Tahiti, reaching Australia and New Zealand, to track the Transit of Venus.
The Royal Society's motto "Nullius in verba" is taken to mean "take nobody's word for it". It is an expression of the determination of Fellows to withstand the domination of authority and to verify all statements by an appeal to facts determined by experiment.
The leading scientific lights of the past four centuries can be found among the 8,000 plus Fellows elected to the Society to date. From Newton to Darwin to Einstein and beyond, pioneers and paragons in their fields are elected by their peers. Current Fellows include Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Richard Dawkins, Stephen Hawking and Tim Berners-Lee.
UCD Twitter: http://twitter.com/ucddublin
UCD Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/universitycollegedublin
UCD Instagram: http://instagram.com/ucddublin
UCD Homepage: http://www.ucd.ie
https://wn.com/Ucd_Professor_Kenneth_Wolfe_Elected_Fellow_Of_The_Royal_Society
Professor of Genomic Evolution, UCD School of Medicine and UCD Conway Institute, University College Dublin
Founded in 1663, the Royal Society has played a part in some of the most fundamental, significant, and life-changing discoveries in scientific history.
It published Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica, and Benjamin Franklin’s kite experiment demonstrating the electrical nature of lightning. It also backed James Cook’s journey to Tahiti, reaching Australia and New Zealand, to track the Transit of Venus.
The Royal Society's motto "Nullius in verba" is taken to mean "take nobody's word for it". It is an expression of the determination of Fellows to withstand the domination of authority and to verify all statements by an appeal to facts determined by experiment.
The leading scientific lights of the past four centuries can be found among the 8,000 plus Fellows elected to the Society to date. From Newton to Darwin to Einstein and beyond, pioneers and paragons in their fields are elected by their peers. Current Fellows include Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Richard Dawkins, Stephen Hawking and Tim Berners-Lee.
UCD Twitter: http://twitter.com/ucddublin
UCD Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/universitycollegedublin
UCD Instagram: http://instagram.com/ucddublin
UCD Homepage: http://www.ucd.ie
- published: 05 May 2017
- views: 1327
1:16
Indiatimes - First Indian Woman Scientist Fellow of Royal Society
Gagandeep Kang enters Royal society of London as FIRST INDIAN scientist fellow. Congratulations for making history! 🙌
For more videos, stay tuned to Indiatimes...
Gagandeep Kang enters Royal society of London as FIRST INDIAN scientist fellow. Congratulations for making history! 🙌
For more videos, stay tuned to Indiatimes!
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/indiatimes
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/indiatimesinsta/
Tweet to us: https://twitter.com/indiatimes
https://wn.com/Indiatimes_First_Indian_Woman_Scientist_Fellow_Of_Royal_Society
Gagandeep Kang enters Royal society of London as FIRST INDIAN scientist fellow. Congratulations for making history! 🙌
For more videos, stay tuned to Indiatimes!
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/indiatimes
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/indiatimesinsta/
Tweet to us: https://twitter.com/indiatimes
- published: 19 Apr 2019
- views: 3475