UCL in the media
Arctic winter sees sluggish sea-ice growth
Rachel Tilling (UCL Earth Sciences) comments on the slow thickening of Arctic sea-ice observed this year.
Read: BBC NewsShould the UK pull plug on Hinkley Point nuclear power station?
Professor Paul Ekins (UCL Bartlett School Environment, Energy & Resources) says doubts about a planned nuclear power plant and the rise of renewable power suggest it is time to rethink a key plank of UK energy strategy.
Read: New ScientistThe gender pray gap
Professor David Voas (UCL Institute of Education) says that it is plausible that a suggested gender gap in religiosity could partly be a matter of biology.
Read: Daily MailThe kitchen coup - how cash shifted the balance of power over household chores
A study led by PhD student Alexandros Theloudis (UCL Economics) concludes that as women's average earnings have increased over the last 30 years, they have simultaneously cut back on domestic chores while men have taken on more.
Read: TelegraphChef vs Science: The ultimate kitchen challenge
Professor Mark Miodownik (UCL Mechanical Engineering) challenges two-Michelin-star chef Marcus Wareing to the ultimate cookery competition to try answer whether cooking is a science or an art.
Watch: BBC Four 'Chef vs Science'What the world can learn from Mexico's tax on sugar-sweetened drinks
PhD student Elisa Pineda (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) says Mexico's experiment with taxing sugary drinks seems to be working. But it shouldn't be seen as the whole solution to the obesity crisis.
Read: The Conversation'Northern lights' spotted on Jupiter
Research led by PhD student William Dunn (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) has found that solar storms trigger Jupiter's intense 'Northern Lights' by generating a new X-ray aurora that is hundreds of times more energetic than Earth's aurora borealis.
Read: Daily Mail, More: Buzzfeed, MotherboardIs religion dying out?
A 2012 survey by the UCL Institute of Education found that 49 per cent of Britons born in 1970 believed there is 'definitely' or 'probably' life after death.
Read: Daily Mail, More: Daily ExpressMaterials modelling in London
Professor Angelos Michaelides (UCL Physics & Astronomy) explains to Nature Materials the challenges in materials modelling and the objectives of the Thomas Young Centre.
Read: NatureEaster
Professor David d'Avray (UCL History) explains why Easter is a moveable celebration.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'Making History' (from 13 mins 4 secs)