
To celebrate this year's International Women's Day on March 8, 2022, we revisit some of the articles and podcasts we have produced with female mathematicians over the last year. We've really enjoyed learning about these women's fascinating work and we hope that you will too!
Maths is beautiful in its own right but it also has applications in all of the sciences and beyond. Here's a collection of topics we have explored over the last year with a range of contributors from different fields.
We celebrate by revisiting some of the articles and podcasts we have produced with female mathematicians over the last year.
Over 50 years ago the rocks collected by Apollo 11 astronauts changed how we thought about the Moon. The same type of rocks, called anorthosites, that have formed through the crystallisation of magma, can be found on Earth. These lunar rocks suggested the theory, now widely accepted, that the Moon was formed in a collision between the proto-Earth and another proto-planet with the huge energy of this impact resulting in hot magma oceans on both the Earth and the Moon.
Mathematicians have a new model for how the Moon's crust was formed
UK Schools have received more than 300,000 CO2 monitors as part of a government initiative that has received significant input from mathematicians though the project CO-TRACE.
UK Schools have received more than 300,000 CO2 monitors as part of a government initiative that has received significant input from mathematicians.