Take part in a focus group with the Careers Team and get a £10 Amazon voucher
The Careers Team would really like to hear your views on the careers services offered by the Careers Team to final year students and graduates.
The Careers Team would really like to hear your views on the careers services offered by the Careers Team to final year students and graduates.
Your fantastic new Pavilion at Aldham Robarts Library is now open.
Sophia Charuhas's graduate art show selected for the Science Gallery, Melbourne.
Join Bright Network's free 3-day virtual Internship Experience UK and supercharge your CV this summer. Content will be delivered by leading employers and industry experts, including Amazon, British Airways, BT, Teach First, PWC, Clyde & Co, Google, EY, Nestlé, Schroders and many more.
Join the Environmental Sustainability and Energy Team as we visit the Farm Urban HQ!
The Environmental Sustainability and Energy Team at LJMU are litter picking around campus, keeping our city and estate clean for our community.
In this RCBB Research Seminar Series talk Prof Helen L. Ball (Durham University) will present her current research under the title "Understanding Infant Sleep – the view from Anthropology".
Come and join us as we litter pick around the Education Building and John Fosters Garden.
The Environmental Sustainability and Energy Team invite you to an evening watching Wall-E!
A neutron star binary merges somewhere in the Universe approximately every 10 to 1000 seconds, creating violent explosions potentially observable in gravitational waves and across the electromagnetic spectrum. The transformative coincident gravitational wave and electromagnetic observations of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 gave invaluable insights into these cataclysmic collisions and fundamental astrophysics. However, despite our high expectations, we have failed to see any other event like it. In this talk, I will highlight what we can learn from other observations of mergers seen directly in gravitational waves or indirectly as a gamma-ray burst and/or kilonova. I will also discuss the diversity in electromagnetic and gravitational-wave emission we can expect for future mergers and showcase tools to help maximally extract physics from existing and future observations.