e-Science Highlights 2 
This second edition of Highlights features a further selection of short articles about recent scientific outputs from the programme.
24 February 2007
e-Science identifies new weapons in battle against hospital superbugs
Techniques developed under the UK e-Science Programme led to the identification of the anti-MRSA drugs that received widespread publicity in the UK national media. E-Therapeutics, a spin-out company from Newcastle University, announced the discovery of three drugs that are effective against antibiotic-resistant superbugs, such as that scourge of hospitals, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
25 April 2006
Building a heart model to probe disease
What causes heart disease - and how can it be prevented or cured? Experiments using heart tissue are unable to provide all the answers. Now, however, the Integrative Biology project is pioneering an alternative approach. It involves searching for clues in the most sophisticated computer models of the heart ever created.
Highlights from the UK e-Science Programme 
In a series of short articles, this publication highlights a few of the achievements of the UK e-Science Programme after its first five years. It concentrates on the science that has been enabled rather than the e-Science technologies that have enabled it and outlines the goals for a national e-infrastructure.
16 August 2005
Royal Society publishes e-Science theme issue
Some of the latest developments in scientific grid computing, many of them outputs of the UK e-Science Programme, are discussed in a special Theme Issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A.
12 August 2005
e-Science project simulates fluids as they flow
The EPSRC-funded RealityGrid e-Science project has simulated and visualised how complex fluids, such as blood, milk, polymers and oil, flow.
11 August 2005
e-Science Core Programme Report
This report gives an overview of the third year of activity of the Core e-Science Programme, following on from the reports on Year 1 and 2.
27 June 2005
Cancer treatment benefits from e-Science techniques
Cancer specialists in West Anglia, a UK region, are using e-Science techniques to deliver better care to their patients. The Telemedicine project, which is funded by the UK Core e-Science Programme and Macmillan Cancer Relief, is giving doctors access to richer, more comprehensive patient information than previously - and is saving them time.
31 March 2005
e-Science Evaluation Report 2004
This evaluation report brings together the achievements of the UK national e-Science Programme covering the period from the Spending Review 2000 Announcement to March 2004.