UCL in the media
Urban Myths: Can a coin dropped from a skyscraper kill you?
As Britain unveils a new pound coin, Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy) answers the question of whether falling change can, in fact, be lethal.
Read: GuardianBlack scholars still experience racism on campus
At a UCL talk titled "Why Isn't My Professor Black?" academics argued that Universities are beset by a racist mindset that views black people as "outsiders".
Read: THEPhilosophy is dead white - and dead wrong
Dr Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman (UCL Philosophy) discusses philosophy's colour line.
Read: THERipples in space-time: scientists discover gravitational waves from the Big Bang
UCL experts including Dr Hiranya Peiris (UCL Physics & Astronomy) comment about the discovery of gravitational waves - ripples from the Big Bang 14.8 billion years ago, which were predicted by Einstein almost a century ago.
Watch: Newsnight More: The Guardian, ITV News at Ten, Channel 4 News, Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Inside Science' (from 4 minutes 10 sec)Map: London's most popular commuter destinations
Dr Ed Manley (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis) has created a map showing the most popular destinations for the capital's millions of commuters, using data gathered from nearly 50 million Oyster Card journeys.
Read: Evening Standard, More: Daily MailStatins 'may help control multiple sclerosis'
Early trial results show statins can slow brain shrinkage in people with MS, according to new research published in The Lancet and led by Dr Jeremy Chataway, (UCL Institute of Neurology) and Professor John Greenwood (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology).
Read: BBC News, More: UCL News, The Independent, Guardian, Daily Mail, New ScientistShakespeare Week
Professor Lisa Jardine (UCL Centre for Editing Lives & Letters) discusses the gender politics in Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Woman's Hour' (from 17 minutes 15 secs)Missing Malaysia plane: 10 theories examined
Professor Hugh Griffiths (UCL Electronic and Electrical Engineering) discusses the possibility that the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 hid in the shadow of another airliner.
Read: BBCViking Art: A Culture Show Special
Dr Jane Kershaw (UCL Archaeology) looks at the art found in Viking jewelry.
Watch: BBC Two 'Viking Art: A Culture Show Special' (from 23 minutes 30 secs)What theatre and science can learn from one another
Professor David McAlpine (UCL Ear Institute) looks at the similarities between the arts and the sciences and the particularly the opportunities for engagement between theatre and the scientific process.
Read: The Conversation