Cover photo: Strain in graphene opens up apseudomagnetic gap. Generated by the CondensedMatter Physics Group at the University ofManchester, this image is a representation of thework at Manchester lead by Professor Andre GeimFRS, a Royal Society Research Professor, andProfessor Konstantin Novoselov, a Royal SocietyUniversity Research Fellow. Professors Geim andNovoselov were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physicsin 2010 for their groundbreaking experimentsregarding graphene, a form of carbon, which is thethinnest and strongest material ever isolated. Bothmen have been cited since their award as ‘globalscientists’; both were born and studied in Russia,spent time in the Netherlands, and are now basedhere in the UK, attracting funding and accoladesfrom UK, European, and international sources.© Paco Guinea 2010.
Knowledge, Networks andNations: Global scientificcollaboration in the 21st century
RS Policy document 03/11Issued: March 2011 DES2096ISBN: 978-0-85403-890-9© The Royal Society, 2011Requests to reproduce all or part of thisdocument should be submitted to:The Royal Society6–9 Carlton House TerraceLondon SW1Y 5AGT +44 (0)20 7451 2500F +44 (0)20 7930 2170E science.policy@royalsociety.orgW royalsociety.org