

Green heat
Putting hydrogen to work on industrial heating
A partnership between startup H2GO Power and Baxi will bring climate neutral heating to a wide range of industrial applications.
Putting hydrogen to work on industrial heating
A partnership between startup H2GO Power and Baxi will bring climate neutral heating to a wide range of industrial applications.
Magma observed taking an unexpected route beneath volcanoes
Imperial researchers have observed magma taking an unexpected route beneath volcanoes, shedding light on the processes behind eruptions.
Meteorites reveal likely origin of Earth’s volatile chemicals
Meteorites have told Imperial researchers the likely far-flung origin of Earth’s volatile chemicals, some of which form the building blocks of life.
Sea level rise to dramatically speed up erosion of rock coastlines by 2100
Rock coasts, which make up over half the world’s coastlines, could retreat more rapidly in the future due to accelerating sea level rise.
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NASA and Imperial scientists detect epic meteoroid impact on Mars
NASA instruments co-developed at Imperial have detected a Mars meteoroid impact that left a crater one and a half times the size of Trafalgar Square.
New £3.6M grant paves the way for green energy development in the UK
Imperial scientists have won a £3.6M NERC grant to research how to access greener energy sources safely.
Machine learning model uses social media for more accurate wildfire monitoring
Scientists have developed a new machine learning model that uses social media data to predict and monitor wildfires more accurately in real-time.
Compositional variation in the mantle transition zone impacts mantle convection
A new review of mantle transition zone seismic properties reveals the impacts of this zone on heat and chemical circulation within Earth’s mantle.
Carbon captured and stored since 1996 is significant but overestimated
Although a significant amount of carbon has been caught and stored so far, governments should curb overestimation with reporting frameworks.
Q&A: What ancient coral reefs can tell us about our changing climate
Thanks to nearly £1m of new funding from NERC, Imperial researchers will study ancient coral reefs to tap into lost records of our changing climate.