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'What's happening in the mathematical sciences?'

What's happening in the mathematical sciences? Volume 8

Dana Mackenzie

Dana Mackenzie's book is a display of modern mathematical developments. The author's way of presenting the material is vivid, simple and engaging. The narrative is illustrated by beautiful pictures. More often than not, in describing a mathematical problem, Mackenzie goes for the feel of it rather than for accuracy. This way of mathematical storytelling is not without its dangers: one should beware of giving the reader a false sense of understanding. Mackenzie, however, does a pretty good job of avoiding this. He has a remarkable sense of boundaries and knows where to stop being vague and where to just stop.

Recent developments of mathematics brought about the solutions of several old and important questions in number theory, topology and the theory of dynamical systems. More recent areas, related to finance and computer science, have also witnessed a lot of attention-grabbing events — some good and some bad. The book consists of nine chapters — each one an autonomous story about a particular mathematical development. Here's a brief overview.

The first chapter tells the story of a movie rental company's contest to develop an algorithm for predicting customers' likes and dislikes. Among other things, it demonstrated the strength of "crowdsourcing," as some of the competitors teamed up on their way to the finish. Contrary to the conventional wisdom of machine learning, some popular algorithms (such as nearest neighbour methods) fared badly and the prize went unexpectedly to a different method involving the factorisation of matrices.

We then move on to an entirely different area, the theory of dynamical systems. The story begins with a simple question: does a stretchy pendulum have periodic trajectories? The plot quickly thickens as we delve into magnetic monopoles — hypothetical particles that are magnets with just on pole — and interesting shapes from differential topology. Spoiler alert: yes, periodic trajectories exist.

The recent financial crisis is the focus of chapter three, which looks at the mathematical model of derivative trading which some people have blamed for the crisis. There was nothing wrong with the model (or, if you prefer, all models are wrong in some sense), but the investment banks forgot that it was only a model and treated it as the ultimate truth without any limitations.

There is more on dynamics in chapter four. It describes how billiard balls might behave on an infinite table and asks whether or not it is possible to send the ball to infinity. Other questions pertaining to the ball trajectories in such systems are also discussed. Billiards make another appearance in chapter seven, which looks at the theory of quantum chaos. It's well known what shape of billiard table leads to chaotic ball trajectories in classical physics. But the low-energy quantum mechanical analogue of this system is not chaotic at all. As we go to higher energies, the quantum billiard should approach its classical version, and thus we can be certain that chaos must emerge. But how it emerges has been an open question until recently. Surprisingly, the recent advance in this problem is owed to pure number theory.

Chapter five is devoted to statistics in a broad sense: mathematical models of patients that are used to supplement clinical trials in some areas of health care. The chapter is primarily about a 2009 breast cancer study, which found that the recommended frequency of mammograms is unnecessarily high. (Also see this Plus article for more on the subject).

Next up is randomness. Chapter six asks how to determine the mixing time necessary for a system, say the milk and coffee in your cup, to go from an unmixed to a completely random mixed state. There has been a recent breakthrough in calculating such a time for a model describing the behaviour of an array of magnets. The surprise is that the onset of randomness turned out to be quite abrupt.

Chapter eight looks at a favourite object with Plus readers: a body with only two equilibrium positions, one stable and one unstable, also known as the Gömböc, which has only recently been discovered (you can read about it in this Plus article). The chapter also looks at another recent advance in classical three-dimensional geometry: how to find the densest packing arrangement for regular tetrahedrons. Unlike in two dimensions, three-dimensional space cannot be covered completely by any platonic body but the cube, so the question of the densest packing is even more important.

Finally, chapter nine deals with high-dimensional topology. Mathematicians have recently tackled an old-standing mystery called the Kervaire invariant conjecture. This is one of the problems that make experts hearts beat faster but leave everyone else puzzled about what is going on. Very roughly speaking, the Kervaire invariant is a characteristic of a topological object, which can tell you whether or not you can sew a disk-shaped cap onto any closed loop that you cut into that object. The value of this invariant (which can only be 0 or 1) has long been found in all dimensions except 6, 14, 30, 62, 126, and so on (each one is an integer power of two minus two). The recent triumph consists of finding the invariant's value for all higher dimensions from this list (i.e. 254, 510, 1022, etc.)

You will need some knowledge of mathematics to read this book, at least you should know your maths to GCSE level. For those with a mathematical background – teachers, students, engineers or mathematicians – it will make a fascinating read.

Book details:
What's happening in the mathematical sciences? Volume 8
Dana Mackenzie
hardback — 129 pages
American Mathematical Society (2011)
ISBN: 978-0821849996

About the author

Ilia Rushkin is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Nottingham. His research is in theoretical physics.

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