photo by Alex Brenner
Helen Arney by Alex Brenner
photo by Mihaela Bodlovic
  • Rollercoasters for BBC Two, and “Physics – you’ve got to laugh…”

    eureka Quick news update for Monday morning… the article I wrote for Financial Times Magazine is online now (with no paywall!) which means that you too can discover how to poke at science with a funny-stick, rather than just a serious one.

    It was fun to write and I’ve had a lot of nice comments about it so far, I hope I get a chance to write more bits and pieces like this next year.

    In between that, Ada Lovelace Day, and getting our new Festival of the Spoken Nerd tour on sale (Full Frontal Nerdity guaranteed – details for gigs in London and all over the UK are here) I’ve also been filming my first item for the fantastic BBC Two series “Coast”. It’s about the science of roller coasters, so I spent a very jolly Monday in Blackpool in the rain with a fantastic crew, climbing the UK’s tallest ride on foot. Twice. And then going on it more times that I can remember. It was utterly awesome and if you tune in to the next series in Spring 2014 you can see me scream my way around the Big One whilst attempting to explain G forces and camber.

    If you want to make sure you don’t miss it, join my mailing list and I’ll let you know when it’s going out on the tellybox.

  • Ada Lovelace Day – Live! and TEDxLSE

    Ada-GenericNext Tuesday I’m quite over-the-moon to be hosting Ada Lovelace Day – LIVE! for the third year running. The whole day is an international celebration of women in science, technology, engineering and maths, with events online and in real life all over the world. It’s named after Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron’s daughter and the first computer programmer, even though she was born more than 100 years before the first computer was built.

    If you’re free on 15th October, head to my old university (Imperial College London!) for a variety night of inspiring talks, science demos, comedy and song. Tickets are £10 with discount code “ukulele” or just £5 for students, concessions and Imperial College staff & friends. Click here to get yours.

    If you can’t make it to the show, check findingada.com/book on the 15th to get a copy of the e-book  “A Passion For Science” stacked full of stories about real women of science past and present. With contributions from journalists, authors, scientists and mathematicians both male and female, including my awesome sister Dr Kat Arney. Obviously I’m biased, but even so I think it’s a great read and full of dozens of stories that aren’t heard as often as they should be. My only warning is that if you get it, you’ll find it hard to put down your tablet until it’s finished.

    TEDxLSE

    In other news, I performed a bit of my musicy-sciencey-comedy show about finding my “Voice of an Angle” for TEDxLSE earlier this year, and it is now online! Along with a load of other great short talks from the same day including polymath Ella Saltmarsh, sociable physicist Martin Zaltz Austwick and my favourite marine biologist Helen Scales.

  • This is a WordPress Post

    This is a WordPress Post

    Hooray!  You’re starting your first website, and I (Lauren from Restored 316) am so excited for you!  I remember all those years ago when I first opened WordPress for the first time and the overwhelm that ensued, so friend I’ve been in your shoes!

    Thankfully we have a huge resource of tutorials to help you get started, and you can find all those right here.

    This post is your very first WordPress post that you can go in and edit at any time.

    To edit a post

    Navigate to POSTS > ALL POSTS and hover over any title of the posts you’d like to edit and you’ll see a edit button pop up.  Click edit and you will be taken to a new screen where you can edit your post by adding your own text and images much like you would in a program like Word or Pages.

    To create your own post

    Navigate to POSTS > ADD NEW.  Give your post a name, write some content, set your featured post, and hit the publish button on the top right!  It’s really THAT easy!

    Photo by Andrew Neel on Unsplash