I do not know how to say these sentences properly in english, so I'd like to ask this to a native english speaker:
- the police force (IS / ARE ?) under attack.
- unidentified device: research (WITH / USING / BY USING ?) a science vessel.
None.

We can't explain the universe, just describe it; and we don't know whether our theories are true, we just know they're not wrong. >Harald Lesch
- "is" (police and police force are one object. You use "are" when you're referring to the individuals: policemen)
- all 3 are possible although they have slightly different meanings. In this case I'd say "using" is most appropriate.
"By using" is often considered redundant as well.
None.
- "is" (police and police force are one object. You use "are" when you're referring to the individuals: policemen)
- all 3 are possible although they have slightly different meanings. In this case I'd say "using" is most appropriate.
I'm quite sure that "police" is regarded as a group, so they say "the police are". But I'm not sure about "force".
None.
Police force is under attack. Police unit is under attack. A group of policemen is under attack.
I think you research something
in or
at a facility, which is a science vessel in your case. Not sure which one is better.
None.
Police force is under attack. Police unit is under attack. A group of policemen is under attack.
I think you research something in or at a facility, which is a science vessel in your case. Not sure which one is better.
in this case there is no facility, you need to research the unidentified object by sending a science vessel to it.
None.
Then it should be "send a/the science vessel to research/investigate".
None.

Master has given Dobby a doctorate! Dobby is free!
I'm quite sure that "police" is regarded as a group, so they say "the police are". But I'm not sure about "force".
Multiple groups of items/individuals are plural (policemen are ...), while a single group is singular (the police force is ...).
Also, if you are saying "everyone", "nobody", etc, where the second part of the word (in this case "one" and "body"), it is singular.
Finally, if you have two separate, singular items/people combined with "and", it is plural (NudeRaider and JaFF are fluent in English).
Then it should be "send a/the science vessel to research/investigate".
I want keep the sentence shorter, but I think it is only correct if it is changed to
"research it using a science vessel"
None.
Use the word "investigate" as opposed to "research" it is more fitting.
So:
Investigate it with (a/the) science vessel
"A" if it doesn't matter which science vessel the player uses.
"The" if there is a specific science vessel you are talking about.
"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."
-NudeRaider