The international Science 0+ Festival has started in Moscow
The international Science 0+ festival has started at the Rossiya National Center in Moscow, where everyone who comes is encouraged to make their own discovery. On October 11, Izvestia correspondent Linar Ginatullin was convinced on the spot that science in all its diversity can captivate absolutely everyone.
The festival features the smartest robots, the most useful games, and only cutting—edge technology. For very young visitors who want to grow and grow, the specifics of scientific activity are explained in simple language by professional specialists.
Hundreds of universities and academies presented their cutting—edge research, with a special focus on quantum technologies. For those who still find it difficult to deal with such a topic, there is a special program. Future engineers are being trained at one of the festival's venues, the Polytechnic Institute, as part of the Business of Technology project.
In simple terms, through exciting games and quizzes, the Business of Technology project increases the interest of young people in the technical field and motivates them to innovative thinking and openness to new technologies.
"Our task is primarily to show children, the younger generation and students how engineering works in general, how it develops, what engineering thinking is, and whether there is a place for creativity in this activity," said Ekaterina Glushenkova, Deputy General Director for Scientific and Educational Activities at the Polytechnic Museum.
The festival will help you find answers to a variety of questions. For example, what microchips are made of, what atoms our body consists of, and what scientists left at the bottom of Lake Baikal. And schoolchildren and students had the opportunity to ask scientists about the specifics of each of the discoveries.
At the end of August, a satellite event of the V Congress of Young Scientists, a key event of the Decade of Science and Technology announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2022-2031, was held in Tula in the Octava creative industrial cluster. The regional capital became one of the three satellite cities in 2025. Researchers from all over the country were welcomed by Dmitry Milyaev, Governor of the Tula Region, and Denis Sekirinsky, Deputy Minister of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation.
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