03/15/2019
https://www.geek.com/tech/google-employee-smashes-world-record-for-calculating-pi-1778510/
Google Employee Smashes World Record for Calculating Pi - Geek.com
Emma Haruka Iwao, a Google employee, just broke the world record for calculating the value of pi. On Thursday, Google announced the accomplishment in a blog post, and said that Iwao’s team smashed …
12/05/2018
Negative mass?
Bringing balance to the universe: New theory could explain missing 95 percent of the cosmos
Scientists at the University of Oxford may have solved one of the biggest questions in modern physics, with a new paper unifying dark matter and dark energy into a single phenomenon: a fluid which possesses 'negative mass." If you were to push a negative mass, it would accelerate towards you. This a...
10/05/2018
"What mathematicians do have in common, what is in a way our foundational habit, is the tiny move Urschel executes between the first thing he says and the second.
We say things, or write them down, in order to see if they feel true. We say it and then we think about it. And whatever’s slightly not right, we circle back and revise, making more precise, shaving off the parts that don’t pass inspection. It’s our process in math and it leaks out into the way we talk about our desks and our lives."
John Urschel Goes Pro
Jordan Ellenberg is a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author of How Not To Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking
01/24/2018
https://phys.org/news/2018-01-modern-math-long-standing-debate-viking-age.html
Modern math sheds new light on long-standing debate about Viking-age Ireland conflict
Modern mathematical techniques - similar to those used to analyse social-networking websites - have allowed academics to shed new light on a centuries old debate surrounding the Viking age in Ireland and the famous battle of Clontarf in 1014.
01/10/2018
Richard Schwartz: In Praise of Simple Problems | Quanta Magazine
The mathematician Richard Schwartz finds the hidden depth lurking in simple mathematical puzzles.
01/03/2018
Mathematics, the language of structure & pattern, shows up in remarkable places.
How a Harvard student helped crack the mystery of the Inca code - The Boston Globe
The pre-Columbian empire relied on knotted strings to encode information, a system so complex that scholars are still struggling to decipher it.