Articles

Folding fractions

Folding a piece of paper in half might be easy, but what about into thirds, fifths, or thirteenths? Here is a simple and exact way for fold any fraction, all thanks to the maths of triangles.

Maths in a minute: What's average?

Why the humble average can be grossly misleading.

Good-looking gibberish

How to approximate the English language using maths.

What is infinity?

Take a trip into the never-ending.

How long can we survive a zombie invasion?

Can a mathematical model of zombies' movements allow the human race to survive impending doom?

Who's looking at you?

Observers are, of course, vital in physics: we test our theories by comparing them to our observations. But in cosmology, as Jim Hartle explains, we could be one of many possible observers in the Universe and knowing which one we are is vital in testing our theories.

Two-faced conic sections

Play with our applets to explore the conic sections and their different definitions.

Steady on, Einstein

To celebrate the release of more English translations of Einstein's papers, we revisit one of his previously unknown models of the Universe.

From dust to us

Where planets are born is not necessarily where they will stay…

The Fibonacci sequence: A brief introduction

Anything involving bunny rabbits has to be good.

Introducing the Klein bottle

A Klein bottle can't hold any liquid because it doesn't have an inside. How do you construct this strange thing and why would you want to?

Maths in a minute: Writing infinite sums

How to write a sum that's infinitely long.