How do societies know when an epidemic is over and normal life can resume? What are the criteria and markers of an epidemic’s end, and who has the insight, authority, and credibility to decipher these signs? Join Dr. Erica Charters, professor of the global history of medicine at the University of Oxford for an insightful conversation on how war, disease, and state formation intersect. Erica Charters currently leads a multidisciplinary project on How Epidemics End.
Alumni and Community, Biological Sciences, chemistry, computer science, Faculty of Arts, faculty of science, mathematics, medical microbiology, microbiology, Physics and astronomy, Research and International, Statistics
Attention all students: Do you have passion for science but you aren’t sure what you can do with a science degree? If so, consider attending The Discover Your Future in Science series.
Biological Sciences, chemistry, computer science, data science, faculty of science, Faculty of Science outreach, mathematics, microbiology, Physics and astronomy, Science, science featured, Statistics
An X-ray imaging mission has unveiled the magnetic field in the environment of a dead star. The order and symmetry of the field will reshape our understanding of how it accelerates particles to ultra-high energies, says UM astrophysicist Dr. Samar Safi-Harb, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Extreme Astrophysics and lead author.
Astronomy and Physics, Canada Research Chair, faculty of science, Physics and astronomy, Research and International
Female should play some indoor games and this is better than doing or showing some gymnasia or something like this. I do think that this is so great.