combinatorics

Fields Medallist June Huh tells us about maths you can "feel and touch" and why maths mirrors who we are as a species

Huh may have had relatively late start in mathematics but his work with maths you can feel and touch has won him a Fields medal.

June Huh has been awarded a Fields Medal for work on combinatorics and algebraic geometry.

Whether you want to understand viruses, win at lotto or solve a rubik's cube – you'll need some help from combinatorics.

One of our favourite problems from our sister site NRICH opens a door to the world of combinatorics and symmetry.

Mathematicians have proved a new result in the field of combinatorics.

Euler may not have cracked this problem completely, but it led to a lot of important work, including on what we today know as sudoku.

How many possible genetic relationships are there between a collection of different species? The answer is mind-bogglingly large.

Given there's a finite number of notes on a scale, can we still find a brand new melody? Perhaps they've all been written already!

Can we always find order in systems that are disordered? If so, just how large does a system have to be to contain a certain amount of order?

How do you best allocate students to universities, doctors to hospitals, or kidneys to transplant patients? It's a tough problem that has earned this year's Memorial Prize in Economics.

Andy Murray and Laura Robson made a good team at London 2012, bringing home silver in the mixed doubles. But how do you make sure that the competing pair is the best you can pick from the team?