UCL in the media
Gas prices: FSA examines whistleblower's claims of 'Libor-like' manipulation
"There is a structural issue here that over-the-counter markets with low liquidity can be manipulated by traders putting through visible trades at a duff price. We need to make sure the market is more transparent through a transaction registry," says Professor Chris Cook (UCL Institute for Security & Resilience Studies).
Read: GuardianThe inter-connections between health and climate change
Professor Hugh Montgomery (UCL Clinical Physiology) says that while we may have become used to seeing people dying from malnutrition in the Horn of Africa, within another 20 years we may see people starving in the UK and other developed countries.
Read: GuardianRise in DIY lawyers clogs up the system
Professor Dame Hazel Genn (UCL Laws) warns that the rising number of "DIY litigants" acting without lawyers will lead to a "deterioration in effective access to justice".
Read: The Times (£)A look at the effect of trees on artists
With ash trees under threat from a deadly fungus, Sharon Morris (UCL Slade School of Fine Art) discusses the way that trees imprint themselves on the imagination.
Listen: BBC Radio 4's 'Today' (from 1h 51m 53s)Particle headache: Why the Higgs could spell disaster
Professor Jon Butterworth (UCL Physics & Astronomy) comments on the concept of a multiverse. "It looks as if it's an excuse to give up on deeper explanations of the world, and we don't want to give up," he says.
Read: New ScientistBody down a wire: Living your life in remote-control
A team led by Professor Mel Slater (UCL Computer Science) has built a surrogate robot whose actions mirror a person's body movements.
Read: New Scientist10 unusual ways to see London at night
UCL's Mill Hill observatory is listed as one of the best places for stargazing in London.
Read: Guardian More: Mill Hill ObservatoryMargaret Curran accuses Alex Salmond of 'casual dishonesty'
Professor Alan Trench (UCL Constitution Unit), told a Holyrood inquiry he was "sceptical" about the explanation because the deal "in a sense changes nothing".
Read: TelegraphSurely it's obvious why arrested Sun journalists have not 'walked away'
"A lot will depend, I would guess, on the extent to which the lawyers think their clients have meaningful defences and the extent to which the police have sufficient evidence to mount a case against the individual journalists," says Professor Richard Moorhead (UCL Laws).
Read: Guardian More: Lawyer WatchCan gadgets be safely used during take-off and landing?
Professor Izzat Darwazeh (UCL Electronic & Electrical Engineering) talks about how much interference a gadgets emit in airline mode, and whether they pose a risk to planes during take-off and landing.
Watch: BBC News More: Environmental Engineer