features...
Today's digital world with its free
flow of information, would not exist
without cryptography to guarantee our privacy.
Plus meets mathematician, author and broadcaster
Simon Singh to find out about the science
of secrecy.
In 1999 solicitor Sally Clark was found guilty of murdering
her two baby sons. Highly flawed statistical arguments
may have been crucial in securing her conviction.
As her second appeal approaches, Plus looks at the
case and finds out how courts deal with statistics.
Theoretical physicists are searching for a 'Theory
of Everything' to
reconcile quantum mechanics and relativity -
the two great physical theories of the
twentieth century.
String theory is a current hot favourite, and
some of the world's most eminent physicists
tell us why.
What tactics should a soccer player use when
taking a penalty kick? And what can the goalkeeper do to
foil his plans?
John Haigh uses Game Theory to find the
answers, and looks at his World Cup predictions
from last issue.
In the real world, balls bounce and water splashes because
of the laws of physics. In computer games, a physics engine
ensures the virtual world behaves realistically.
Mathematician and computer programmer Nick
Gray tells us about playing God in a virtual world.