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Articles Blog New Scientist Science Writing

Big Wide World

NS_Big_Wide_WorldI have also blogged for New Scientist’s ‘Real Scientists, Real Lives’ section Big Wide World. Follow the links below to these posts hosted on their website:

Passionate about hunting for little green men
Simulating Mars on Tenerife
The search for life on Mars thwarted by Hollywood
Dear Lewis, the other day I saw a UFO…
Post-doc: Career uncertainty is wearing us down

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Articles BBC Focus Blog Feature Science Writing

High stakes space-race

Focus_July2011The runners and riders hoping to claim a jackpot of £800 million from the European Space Agency

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Articles Blog Feature Science Writing Sky At Night magazine

Seeds from space

Sky72_coverDid life on Earth have its origins in interstellar gas clouds.

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Articles BBC Focus Blog Feature Science Writing

10 Worst Ways to Die in Space

Focus_May2011Passing on after blasting off by asphyxiation, suffocation and spaghettification

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Articles BBC Focus Blog Feature Science Writing

How Stuff Works

Focus_March2011How does a Mars Rover work?

 

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Academic Work Articles Astronomy & Geophysics Blog Feature Fellowship Science Writing

Biological constraints on habitability

AG2011Lewis Dartnell discusses how extremophiles have pushed the survival envelope of terrestrial life – and what this means for the possibility of extraterrestrial life.

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Also available at Astronomy & Geophysics

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Blog Science Writing The Guardian

Careers in the Space Industry

Guardian_careersThe space industry isn’t just about the astronauts. A panel of experts from our live Q&A explore career options in the sector and offer tips on how to get your space career to take off. Lewis Dartnell is an astrobiology researcher, looking into the possibility of life beyond Earth. Lewis works at the Centre for Planetary Sciences

 

Read the full post on The Guardian website

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Articles Blog Cosmos Feature Science Writing

Tomorrow People

Cosmos_issue_36Our four-limbed, one-headed body is just right for living on Earth. But what changes might the low-gravity, radiation saturated environment of space bring to our species? Lewis Dartnell finds the answers.

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Blog Science Writing The Guardian

Arsenic, bacteria and alien life: Lessons from an internet frenzy

Arsenic_lifeDecember 2010 saw the announcement on the Nasa website of a press conference described enigmatically only as to “discuss an astrobiology finding that will impact the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life”. Speculation exploded across the Internet regarding the discovery due to be announced, and I gave an interview to a Sun journalist in an attempt to quash this heresay, which was widely quoted on websites and newspapers including the Telegraph. After the Nasa press conference was delivered, and the news finally announced as to what had actually been discovered, I wrote this Opinion piece for the Guardian as a perspective on the whole affair.

Read the full story on The Guardian website

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Articles BBC Focus Blog Feature Science Writing

Aliens Among Us

Focus_Dec2010We explore the hottest volcanoes and driest deserts to track down the organisms that would be capable of surviving in space.

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Articles Blog Feature New Scientist Science Writing

Ditch the glasses for lifelike 3D

NewScientist_3DTVGun at the ready, you are picking your way through an alien world, tracking an adversary. Spotting your chance, you launch an attack. It takes your foe by surprise, and you’ve got him cold. It’s the sort of scenario you’ll find in any first-person shooter game, but this one is different. 

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Articles Blog Feature Public Services Review Science Writing

The Search for Our Neighbours

PSROne of the prime drivers for space exploration, both in terms of scientific return and in firing the interest of the public, is astrobiology and the search for life beyond our homeworld.

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