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News story
News story
Stellar heartbeats
Astronomers have for the first time listened to the heartbeat of a star other than our own Sun.
News story
Population ex-explosion?
Along with nuclear proliferation and the deteriorating condition of the natural environment, human population growth has become an issue of significant public concern during the past century. With the global population increasing at an ever-accelerating rate, how can the world continue to support its freight of humanity?
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The buzz on bumblebees
The common bumblebee is a familiar visitor to European gardens. At first sight there's nothing particularly remarkable about this small furry interloper, but it has been a source of mathematical controversy for nearly a century.
Article
Rogue trading?
The dangers of trading derivatives have been well-known ever since they were catapulted into the public eye by the spectacular losses of Nick Leeson and Barings Bank. John Dickson explains what derivatives are, and how they can be both risky, and used to reduce risk.
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PLUS WINS a Webby!
At the Webby Awards - the Oscars for the internet - held last week, Plus magazine was officially named as the best science site on the web.
Article
From quasicrystals to Kleenex
This pattern with kite-shaped tiles can be extended to cover any area, but however big we make it, the pattern never repeats itself. Alison Boyle investigates aperiodic tilings, which have had unexpected applications in describing new crystal structures.
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Robots can't play tennis - yet
You play tennis like a champion compared with the best of robots, if you play tennis at all.
Article
On the dissecting table
Bill Casselman writes about the intriguing amateur mathematician Henry Perigal, who took his elegant proof of Pythagoras' Theorem literally to his grave - by having it carved on his tombstone.
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Article
Friends and strangers
Sometimes a mathematical object can be so big that, however disorderly we make the object, areas of order are bound to emerge. Imre Leader looks at the colourful world of Ramsey Theory.