Pure Mathematics

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How to Make Math Lectures More Fun

In high school math classes, play often disappears from the learning process. However, Kathy Sun is finding new ways to make math playful in high school. According to Sun, students usually focus on mastering procedures in math, rather than understanding math’s broader contributions and community aspects. Sun, who is a researcher and professor at Santa […]

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Do You Know Who Invented Math?

Carl Friedrich Gauss famously declared mathematics the “queen of the sciences.” However, as history’s renowned mathematician, he might have been slightly biased. Ask a physicist, and she might retort with the provocative analogy that “physics is to mathematics what sex is to masturbation.” But regardless of whether mathematics wears the crown, it undoubtedly stands as the doyenne of

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Stability of Spherical Vortices Proven Through Mathematics

In a groundbreaking development within the field of Mathematical Science, Professor Kyudong Choi, affiliated with the Department of Mathematical Sciences at UNIST, has delivered unequivocal proof regarding stable spherical vortices.  This momentous discovery carries significant implications for weather anomaly prediction and the advancement of weather forecasting technologies. Understanding Spherical Vortices A vortex represents a rotating

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Researcher Upends Basic Construction Rule

Researcher upends basic construction rule. An Aston University researcher challenged a long-standing construction rule. For centuries, engineers have referred to a hanging chain as an analogy to explain the stability of masonry arches. According to Robert Hooke’s seventeenth-century theory, the shape of a hanging chain should mimic that of an upright rigid arch. Nevertheless, Aston

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Math and Music Combo Boosts Test Scores, Reveals 50-Year Review

An analysis of nearly five decades of research has unveiled that incorporating music into children’s math lessons enhances their performance in the subject. According to a review of nearly 50 years of research, incorporating music into math lessons can enhance children’s performance in math. Believers hold that using music makes math more enjoyable, engages students,

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The Mathematics Secret Behind Lizard Camouflage

The shape-shifting clouds of starling birds, the order of neural networks, or the anthill structure: Nature has many complicated systems whose behaviors can be modeled using mathematical tools. The same holds for the labyrinthine patterns created by the environment-friendly or black scales of the ocellated lizard. A multidisciplinary group from the University of Geneva (UNIGE)

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Harvard Mathematician Solves 150-Year-Old Chess Problem

A Different Kind of Queen’s Gambit Harvard mathematician greatly settles 150-year-old chess problem involving most potent piece on board. In the game of chess, the queen is considered the most powerful piece on the board because of its ability to move in any direction along the rank, file, or diagonal it is placed on. This

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The Mathematical Formula for the Ideal Christmas Tree

During Christmas time, some people prefer something much more traditional in their homes than the Treeasy. For them, members of the University of Sheffield Maths Society created a formula for the perfect Christmas tree as a response to a challenge by U.K. department store Debenhams. The formula, which was produced by students Nicole Wrightman and

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Researchers Identify Intruders in Noise

A group of scientists from MIPT and Kazan National Research Technical University is developing a mathematical apparatus that could improve network security. The results have been released in the journal Mathematics. Complex systems, such as network traffic or living microorganisms, do not have deterministic physical laws to properly define them and predict future habits. In

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