Articles

Particle hunting at the LHCIt's hard to avoid CERN these days. Last year's successful switch-on of CERN's Large Hadron Collider, followed by a blow-out which is currently being fixed, sparked wide-spread media coverage, and currently CERN stars in the Tom Hanks movie Angels and Demons. So what goes on at CERN and why the hubbub about the Large Hadron Collider, known as the LHC? Ben Allanach investigates.
Lambda marks the spot — the biggest problem in theoretical physicsThe mathematical maps in theoretical physics have been highly successful in guiding our understanding of the universe at the largest and smallest scales. Linking these two scales together is one of the golden goals of theoretical physics. But, at the very edges of our understanding of these fields, one of the most controversial areas of physics lies where these maps merge: the cosmological constant problem.
Beauty in mathematicsSurein Aziz explores one of the most beautiful equations in mathematics
How maths killed Lehman BrothersHoratio Boedihardjo explains the credit crunch
EditorialAnd the winner is...
Thinking outside the boxSonia Buckley travels through higher dimensions
The expression that (nearly) explained the UniverseSophie Butchart finds mysterious patterns in the solar system
Knitting by numbersLucinda Mathews visualises tricky surfaces
The Carol syndromeJosé-Manuel Rey unveils the curse of attractiveness
Outer space: Are the constants of nature really constant?Are the unchanging features of the Universe really unchanging?
Births and deaths in fluid chaosDescribing the motion of fluids is a huge and unsolved mathematical problem. There are equations that seem to describe it well, but their complete solution is way beyond reach. But could there be a simpler method? The physicist Jerry Gollub tells Plus about a new discovery which combines experiment with sophisticated maths.
Sundaram's SieveThe prime numbers are the atoms amongst the integers, and while we know that there are infinitely many of them, there's no general formula that generates them all. Julian Havil looks at a little-known algorithm that sieves out all primes up to a given number, and which is astonishing in its simplicity.