Paul Rincon
Paul Rincon (born 1977) is a British journalist specialising in science and technology. He currently works as a science and technology journalist for BBC News, where he has reported across online, radio and television platforms. He covers a wide range of subjects, including astronomy, manned and robotic spaceflight, human evolution, Crustaceans[1] and particle physics.
Popular science
Rincon received a special citation at the 2009 Sir Arthur Clarke Awards, held at Charterhouse School in Godalming, UK, where the BBC News Science Team was awarded the prize for best space reporting.
gollark: With slightly different acceleration, maybe.
gollark: But you can't *meaningfully* customize it, because all the rockets really do is go to orbit or not.
gollark: I'm not aware of whether it is or isn't not not not better than advanced AR rocketry.
gollark: Plus all the messing around with ID chips.
gollark: Also, it's somewhat unintuitive to make spæce stations and such.
External links
- Paul Rincon at Journalisted
- Sir Arthur Clarke Awards 2009
- Frozen baby mammoth coverage, Knight Science Journalism Tracker (MIT)
- Active glacier found on Mars, Knight Science Journalism Tracker (MIT)
References
- Rincon, Paul (31 January 2018). "Stop boiling lobsters alive, says campaign". BBC News. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
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