anna mateu - search results

If you're not happy with the results, please do another search
IMG_8069
Towards a more Egalitarian Science

© Anna Mateu Last April 30, the López Piñero Institute for the History of Medicine and Science, held the launching event of Mètode’s issue 76, entitled Women and Science. Keys to Equality. The event had many attendees that filled the conference hall at

transfer-2
If Da Vinci came back

© Mètode Although some people – and this really is the case – hold that it is nonsense to contend that humanism, art and technology can coexist, they have an infallible antidote for their prejudice in the form

Post Feature Image
Editorial Staff

Editor-in-Chief Martí Domínguez. University of Valencia (UV) Publisher Office of the Vice-Principal for Research of the University of Valencia Editorial Staff Anna Mateu (Assistant editor) José Luis Iniesta (Design and Layout) Lucía Sapiña (O2C) Susanna Ligero (Edition) Anna Alcàcer (Administration) Miguel Lorenzo (Photographer) Linguistic Advice and Editing Josep Agustí (Translation) Manuel Gil (Translation) Tatiana Pina (Proofreading) Mètode Botanical Garden of the

cern1
Beyond the Higgs Boson

© 2008 CERN Peter Higgs visiting the ATLAS experiment at CERN in 2008. The experiments carried out in 2012 in the Swiss centre have finally discovered the particle postulated by Higgs in 1964.. On the last 4th

calaencantada74-3
The enchanted cove

© Col·lecció Aena d'Art Contemporani The cover of Mètode's latest issue is a fragment of The enchanted cove by the landscape painter Joaquim Mir. This Catalan artist was charmed by the magic of the Majorcan coves and painted different versions of the

calaencantada74-3
The Enchanted Cove

© Col·lecció Aena d'Art Contemporani The cover of Mètode's latest issue is a fragment of The enchanted cove by the landscape painter Joaquim Mir. This Catalan artist was charmed by the magic of the Majorcan coves and painted different versions of the same cove in 1902.

69-73
The Long Road to Catching the Sun

Spanish Solar Thermal Electric Industry Association Solar thermal power stations capture heat, not light, using parabolic mirrors to heat a fluid in a tube or by flat mirrors that heat a single central element located in a tower. This hot fluid moves a turbine and generates