UCL in the media
Moment of truth for Venezuela 'Revolution'
"We on the outside shouldn't assume that Chavez was the most inflexible and ideological of the Chavistas," said Professor Bulmer-Thomas (UCL Institute of Americas).
Read: Gulf NewsA star is born in the Atacama as first pictures from the ALMA observatory are unveiled
"Little more than one billion years after the Big Bang, extreme starburst galaxies in the Universe, forming stars at a rate of more than a thousand per year, were a much more commonplace occurrence than previously thought," said Dr Thomas Greve (UCL Physics & Astronomy).
Read: Daily Mail More: Times (£) Scientific AmericanMaths, music and inspiration: the grand challenge of learning
"I want people to believe they're creating something inspiring that will improve people's lives," said Chris Wise (UCL Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering).
Read: The EngineerSuper-dense celestial bodies could be a new kind of planet
Professor Lars Stixrude (UCL Earth Sciences) comments on mysterious dense bodies outside the Solar System.
Read: Nature More: Huffington PostMost extraordinary materials on Earth housed in new Institute of Making
"The Institute of Making is like a dream garden shed where anything is possible. Every material is to hand, from iron ore, to the perfect piece of string," said Dr Zoe Laughlin (UCL Institute of Making).
Read: UCL News More: PhysOrg ITV 1's London Tonight TelegraphLondoners have problems with their teeth
Dr Paul Batchelor comments on figures from the Health and Social Care Information Centre that show that more Londoners are admitted to hospital because of problems with their teeth than anywhere else in the country. Watch: BBC Breakfast (no recording available)
A president, a jazz trumpeter, an economist, a socialite and codebreaker and a conductor
Dr Marco Aponte-Moreno (UCL Management Science & Innovation) comments on the personality and charisma of Hugo Chavez.
Listen: BBC Radio 4's The Last Word (from 2 mins)Have they found the Higgs boson at last?
"We have to keep working at it, but on the face of it this means the Standard Model is a much more powerful theory than many physicists suspected," said Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy).
Read: Express More: STVHealth Myth: Cheese dreams
Cheese actually contains a chemical call tryptophan which promotes sleep, says Professor Matthew Walker (UCL Brain Sciences).
Listen: BBC World Service's Health Check (from 15 mins)Migration shown to have low impact on jobs
A UCL study found that immigration can impact average wages, but the amount is small.
Read: FT