![]() Traffic jam mystery solved by mathematicians December 19, 2007 | User rating: 3.9 / 5 after 357 vote(s)
| User comments: 31
Mathematicians from the University of Exeter have solved the mystery of traffic jams by developing a model to show how major delays occur on our roads, with no apparent cause. Many traffic jams leave drivers ... | |
![]() The Best Way to Board a Plane February 14, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 120 vote(s)
| User comments: 18
Most airlines board passengers the same way, first filling the seats in the back of the plane, and then moving to the front. After a recent experience boarding a plane in this manner, Fermilab physicist Jason ... | |
![]() The new shape of music: Music has its own geometry, researchers find April 17, 2008 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 133 vote(s)
| User comments: 11
The connection between music and mathematics has fascinated scholars for centuries. More than 200 years ago Pythagoras reportedly discovered that pleasing musical intervals could be described using simple ... | |
Glimpses of a new (mathematical) world March 13, 2008 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 70 vote(s)
| User comments: 8
A new mathematical object was revealed yesterday during a lecture at the American Institute of Mathematics (AIM). Two researchers from the University of Bristol exhibited the first example of a third degree transcendental ... | |
Mathematicians find new solutions to an ancient puzzle March 14, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 80 vote(s)
| User comments: 5
Many people find complex math puzzling, including some mathematicians. Recently, mathematician Daniel J. Madden and retired physicist, Lee W. Jacobi, found solutions to a puzzle that has been around for centuries. | |
![]() Model of Easter Island Collapse Might Reveal Message for Today February 11, 2008 | User rating: 4.3 / 5 after 80 vote(s)
| User comments: 4
When a thriving civilization suddenly collapses, it’s often a mystery – and an ominous one, at that. For Easter Island circa 1000-1400 AD, experts believe it was a case of humans overexploiting their natural ... | |
![]() Brain waves pattern themselves after rhythms of nature February 15, 2008 | User rating: 4.2 / 5 after 35 vote(s)
| User comments: 4
The same rules of physics that govern molecules as they condense from gas to liquid, or freeze from liquid to solid, also apply to the activity patterns of neurons in the human brain. University of Chicago ... | |
Concrete examples don't help students learn math, study finds April 24, 2008 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 34 vote(s)
| User comments: 4
A new study challenges the common practice in many classrooms of teaching mathematical concepts by using “real-world,” concrete examples. Researchers led by Jennifer Kaminski, researcher scientist at Ohio State University’s ... | |
![]() Math Models Snowflakes January 17, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 29 vote(s)
| User comments: 3
Three-dimensional snowflakes can now be grown in a computer using a program developed by mathematicians at UC Davis and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. | |
Fate might not be so unpredictable after all, study suggests December 03, 2007 | User rating: 4.3 / 5 after 47 vote(s)
| User comments: 3
Why does it take so long for soul mates to find each other? How does disease spread through a person’s body? When will the next computer virus attack your hard-drive? | |
![]() Indians predated Newton 'discovery' by 250 years August 13, 2007 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 223 vote(s)
| User comments: 2
A little known school of scholars in southwest India discovered one of the founding principles of modern mathematics hundreds of years before Newton according to new research. | |
![]() A crystal that nature may have missed January 03, 2008 | User rating: 4 / 5 after 30 vote(s)
| User comments: 2
For centuries, human beings have been entranced by the captivating glimmer of the diamond. What accounts for the stunning beauty of this most precious gem? As mathematician Toshikazu Sunada explains in an ... | |
Novel mathematical model predicts new wave of drug-resistant HIV infections in San Francisco February 17, 2008 | User rating: 4.2 / 5 after 9 vote(s)
| User comments: 2
A mathematical model shows that a new wave of drug-resistant HIV is rising among among men in San Francisco who have sex with men and that this trend will continue over the next few years, according to a new study from the ... | |
140-year-old math problem solved by researcher March 03, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 88 vote(s)
| User comments: 2
A problem which has defeated mathematicians for almost 140 years has been solved by a researcher at Imperial College London. | |
Bridging the math gender gap May 29, 2008 | User rating: 4 / 5 after 5 vote(s)
| User comments: 2
The gender gap in math perceived to exist between girls and boys has long been contested. New research published in the journal Science sheds clarity on the debate and demonstrates that girls perform better in mathematics ... | |
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