I don’t have live access to current news right now, but I can share the latest I can verify up to my last update and how to check fresh coverage.
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Brian Cox has remained active as a public-facing physicist and TV presenter, with recent years featuring new science programs, public discussions, and appearances at educational events. For the most up-to-date articles, you can search major outlets (BBC News, The Guardian, The Telegraph, Space.com) and Brian Cox’s official channels for fresh posts.[3][7][8]
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Useful ways to get the latest:
- Check BBC News science section or the BBC’s Brian Cox pages for recent interviews or program announcements.
- Follow Prof Brian Cox on X (formerly Twitter) and his YouTube channel for timely updates and event notices.
- Look at university or science news outlets that serialize his appearances and talks.
If you’d like, I can perform a quick, current web search on your behalf and summarize the newest items with citations.
Sources
Professor Brian Cox, who has become an international media star thanks to his hit TV series on the origin of the solar system, has been made an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List. The 42-year-old professor, based at The University of Manchester School of Physics and Astronomy, has had a meteoric rise to worldwide stardom in his field. ...
www.manchester.ac.ukProfessor Brian Cox: read the latest news about the English physicist. Find out about the possibility of alien life, the James Webb telescope, and the Flat Earth theory.
www.ladbible.comProfessor Brian Cox returns to his old school to try and inspire the next generation of scientists.
www.bbc.comWatch the latest from ITV News - Professor Brian Cox has returned to his old primary in Oldham, among other schools in the area, as part of a campaign to get more young people into science.
www.itv.comBrian Cox - News - IMDb - Movies, TV, Celebs, and more...
www.imdb.comUniversity of Manchester scientist Professor Brian Cox returns to television screens in a new BBC2 series called Science Britannica starting on Wednesday 18 September. Rock-star turned scientist Professor Cox, part of the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, will explore why, when science has done so much for humanity, it sometimes g...
www.manchester.ac.uk