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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
101.www.astroarts.co.jp511000
102.www.oie.int507000
103.chandra.harvard.edu479000
104.www.inrp.fr472000
105.www.astrolab.ru469000
106.www.ias.ac.in468000
107.whc.unesco.org468000
108.www.chemieonline.de458000
109.www.vitisphere.com448000
110.www.scirus.com435000
111.www.gsi.de421000
112.www.idi.ntnu.no421000
113.www.deutsch-als-fremdsprache.de420000
114.www.ams.org414000
115.www.geo.de405000
116.www.technologyreview.com392000
117.www.ige.ch391000
118.www.cypress.com384000
119.www.astronomy.ru380000
120.mathworld.wolfram.com376000
121.www.wsl.ch376000
122.www.hausarbeiten.de375000
123.www.math.ntnu.no375000
124.www.bdtf.hu375000
125.www.123recht.net373000
126.www.textlog.de369000
127.www.mpe.mpg.de366000
128.www.ti.com362000
129.www.rankingsolar.com361000
130.www.livescience.com360000
131.www.plantphysiol.org360000
132.peccatte.karefil.com357000
133.saturn.jpl.nasa.gov356000
134.www.starlab.ru354000
135.www.fas.org352000
136.www.nhm.uio.no352000
137.www.sur-la-toile.com350000
138.www.ras.ru349000
139.babelfish.altavista.com348000
140.www.dtic.mil344000
141.www.astronet.ru344000
142.www.bfs.admin.ch338000
143.www.lyngsat.com333000
144.www.irem.univ-mrs.fr333000
145.www.dlr.de332000
146.www.popularmechanics.com331000
147.www.nims.go.jp331000
148.www.xilinx.com327000
149.www.les-mathematiques.net327000
150.www.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de326000
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103. chandra.harvard.edu

Rating: 479000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'chandra.harvard.edu' on the other websites

chandra.harvard.edu

The Chandra X-ray Observatory Center :: Gateway to the Universe of X-ray Astronomy!

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Researchers Create Nanostructures, and Whip Up a Recipe, Too
Out of a sugar, a salt and Everclear, scientists have made a new nanostructure that could be used for storing hydrogen or delivering drugs. It could also become a hot new ingredient for chefs.
feeds.nytimes.com
Vital Signs: Screening: Many Skip Follow-Up Tests for Colon Cancer
Many patients who undergo fecal blood tests for colon and rectal cancer fail to take another test within two years as recommended, a study reports.
feeds.nytimes.com
Science funding in the UK: how will it be hit by the cuts? Visualised and as a spreadsheet
The Comprehensive Spending Review could have a far-reaching impact on UK research. See how science funding works now• Get the data• Interactive graphicBritain is facing a major brain drain as scientists abandon the country for better-funded jobs abroad. Leading researchers, including an Oxford professor of physics and a stem cell researcher seeking a cure for the commonest form of blindness, say they are poised to quit Britain. Meanwhile the heads of several prestigious universities warn that proposed government cuts to Britain's science budget threaten "an insidious grinding down of the UK research community".So, where does the money come from now? Basic university funding for research in the UK comes in two streams from government. In 2008/09, £3.3bn came via the research councils and £2.2bn came via the higher education funding councils.The former is distributed through competitive grants for specific research projects and pays for equipment and PhD and postdoctoral students. The latter is distributed to universities via a formula that takes into account their scores in the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), a rating of university departments on the quality of their output. This funding stream, called qualitative research (QR), is used to pay for basic infrastructure and staff at universities.An additional £2.2bn comes from the R&D budgets of government departments, including medical research funds from the NHS.Despite a decade of increases in science research funding, thanks to a booming economy and a progressive Labour administration sympathetic to research and innovation, the UK still spends a smaller amount of its GDP on R&D than other advanced countries. In 2007, the UK's public spend on R&D was 1.8%, while German's was 2.54%, France got to 2.08%, Japan was at 3.44% and the US at 2.68%. This research, from BIS, shows exactly how much money is spent on scientific and other R&D. You can also get some great statistics from the Campaign for Science and Engineering. The full data is below. What can you do with it?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterCuts and closuresTax and spendingLiberal-Conservative coalitionLabourConservativesResearchResearch fundingResearch and developmentHigher educationScience funding crisisScience policyAlok Jhaguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Video | Richard Dawkins: What would extraterrestrial life be like?
Matt Ridley and Richard Dawkins speculate about the nature of extraterrestrial life in front of an audience at the Centre for Life in Newcastle
guardian.co.uk
What's been eating the ammonites?
A new research paper by experts in Lyme Regis suggests that local ammonite fossils have visible bite marks.
news.bbc.co.uk