The incompleteness theorem is accepted as part of the mathematical canon today, but columnist Jacob Aron says it was a ...
The Kardar Parisi Zhang equation models surface growth. After forty years, researchers confirmed its two dimensional behavior using polaritons in engineered materials.
That doesn't mean that someone can steal your coins tomorrow, but it does mean that the risk posed by quantum computers could ...
As Artemis II prepares to land in California this week, some educators and advocates say the mission has given them the ...
According to the competition's organizing committee, the average score of the participating AI teams was 18, which was on par ...
David J. Silvester, a mathematics professor at the University of Manchester, has developed a novel machine-learning method to ...
A University of Houston researcher and his collaborators have developed a mathematical model that helps identify whether a competitive environment is healthy, stagnant or skewed. Published in the ...
Who is Satoshi Nakamoto? The hunt for Bitcoin’s elusive inventor has become a mythical quest, akin to discovering Atlantis or ...
Your Email is Encrypted Today, but Will It Hold Up Tomorrow? Awakening one day to discover that every “secure email” you’ve ever written was not secure at all. Your client contracts, financial ...
"I fear for the future of this country. I won’t see the ultimate consequences, but there are enough signs right now to tell ...
Crystals, bacterial colonies, flame fronts: the growth of surfaces was first described in the 1980s by the Kardar–Parisi–Zhang equation. Since then, it has been regarded as a fundamental model in ...