click here for the plus home page
© 1997-2009, Millennium Mathematics Project, University of Cambridge.
Permission is granted to print and copy this page on paper for non-commercial use. For other uses, including electronic redistribution, please contact us.
Do you know what's good for you?
icon

Understand the maths behind health and medicine

Careers with maths
icon

Gavin Harper is a mathematician working right at the heart of genetics

A favourite from the archive...
Subscribe to our RSS feed:
AddThis Feed Button subscribe to our RSS feed
 
March 2010
Tags

geometry

Tags: geometry : arithmetic : strategy : arithmetico-geometric series


Tags: geometry : fields medal : number theory : topology


Some people think science is worthwhile because it is useful; some argue that it also increases our aesthetic appreciation of art and nature. But you rarely hear anyone argue that science is beautiful in itself. With the start of our new series "Imaging maths", Plus argues for recognition of a mathematical aesthetic.

Tags: klein bottle : geometry : Aesthetics


Feature icon

Why do so many people say they hate mathematics, asks David Acheson? The truth, he says, is that most of them have never been anywhere near it, and that mathematicians could do more to change this perception - perhaps by emphasising the element of surprise that so often accompanies mathematics at its best.

Tags: proof : Fermat's Last Theorem : ellipse : geometry : Pi : pendulum : kepler : mathematics and magic : leibniz : focal points : linked pendulums


Feature icon

Everyone knows what symmetry is, and the ability to spot it seems to be hard-wired into our brains. Mario Livio explains how not only shapes, but also laws of nature can be symmetrical, and how this aids our understanding of the universe.

Tags: geometry : symmetry : physics : symmetry operations : relativity : electromagnetism : weak force


Feature icon

Leonhard Euler was one of the most prolific mathematicians of all time. This year marks the 300th anniversary of his birth. Robin Wilson starts off a four part series on Euler with a look at his life and work.

Tags: history of mathematics : geometry : harmonic series : topology : Euler : infinite series : Euler year


Feature icon

Dusty books, chalky blackboards and checked shirts are all things usually associated with maths. But according to Jonathan Tims, pubs, hot chocolate and cats can be far more inspirational. Join him on a trip through shadow land.

Tags: geometry : projective geometry : conic sections : Pappus's theorem


Feature icon

One of the many strange ideas from quantum mechanics is that space isn't continuous but consists of tiny chunks. Ordinary geometry is useless when it comes to dealing with such a space, but algebra makes it possible to come up with a model of spacetime that might do the trick. And it can all be tested by a satellite. Shahn Majid met up with Plus to explain.

Tags: cosmology : astronomy : geometry : quantum mechanics : general relativity : relativity : non-commutative geometry : spacetime : quantum uncertainty : higgs boson


Feature icon

Plus went to see members of Norman Foster's group of architects to learn about the maths behind architecture.

Tags: computer simulation : geometry : computer programming : computer science : computer animation : computer graphics : architecture


Feature icon

Geometry is power

Tags: geometry : engineering


Feature icon

You might know the famous formula for an area of a circle, but why does this formula work? Tom Körner's explanation really is a piece of cake, served up with a hefty estimate of pi.

Tags: geometry : Pi : calculating digits of pi


Feature icon

If you've ever redecorated a bathroom, you'll know that there are only so many ways in which you can tile a flat plane. But once you move into the curved world of hyperbolic geometry, possibilities become endless and the most amazing fractal structures ensue. Caroline Series and David Wright give a short introduction to the maths behind their beautiful images.

Tags: tiling : fractal : chaos : geometry : hyperbolic geometry : computer graphics


Feature icon

Leonhard Euler, the most prolific mathematician of all time, would have celebrated his 300th birthday this year. In this article, the second in a four-part series on Euler and his work, Abigail Kirk explores one of the formulae that carry his name.

Tags: geometry : Euler : Euler year : Euler's polyhedron formula : Euler characteristic : platonic solid


This issue of Plus is largely a matter of chance. We find an almighty coincidence and try to model it, explore whether statistical media headlines illuminate or mislead, and try to get our head around league tables. On a more certain note, we examine string theory, which many people think explains everything, look back at one of the greatest mathematical works ever written, and try to pin down the number five.

Tags: geometry : algebra : pythagoras' theorem : Zeno's paradoxes : golden ratio : Euclidean geometry : Euclid's Elements : hyperbolic geometry : irrational number : plus birthday : number system : Al-Khwarizmi


Feature icon

The computer animation used in movies and games is now so lifelike, it is very hard to believe that you are actually watching a surface built from simple shapes of triangles. Phil Dench tells Plus how he uses mathematics to help bring these models to life.

Tags: geometry : mathematics in films : computer animation


Feature icon

Sonia Buckley travels through higher dimensions

Tags: geometry : special relativity : tesseract


Feature icon

..You can see forever. Or can you?

Tags: geometry : Pythagoras theorem


Feature icon

We've all heard of origami. It's all about making paper birds and pretty boxes, and is really just a game invented by Japanese kids, right? Prepare to be surprised as Liz Newton takes you on a journey of origami, maths and science.

Tags: tiling : geometry : tesselation : polygon


Feature icon

Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) is now chiefly remembered as a mathematical astronomer who discovered three laws that describe the motion of the planets. J.V. Field continues our series on the origins of proof with an examination of Kepler's astronomy.

Tags: history of mathematics : gravity : proof : ellipse : astronomy : geometry : Kepler's three laws of planetary motion : error


Feature icon

Van Gogh paintings mimic the physics that governs turbulence

Tags: geometry : physics : weather


Feature icon

We may not have found life out there, but there is a hexagon on Saturn.

Tags: astronomy : geometry


Feature icon

A public discussion explores deep questions

Tags: astronomy : geometry : physics : spacetime


Feature icon

Maths explains the rainbow's secrets

Tags: geometry : physics : weather : rainbow


Feature icon

Squares do it, triangles do it, even hexagons do it — but pentagons don't. They just won't fit together to tile a flat surface. So are there any tilings based on fiveness? Craig Kaplan takes us through the five-fold tiling problem and uncovers some interesting designs in the process.

Tags: tiling : geometry : Euclidean geometry : spherical geometry : hyperbolic geometry : symmetry : five-fold tiling problem


Feature icon

A Beautiful Mathematical Method for Modelling Viruses

Tags: geometry : symmetry : group theory : biology : viruses


Feature icon

A Gömböc is a strange thing. It looks like an egg with sharp edges, and when you put it down it starts wriggling and rolling around as if it were alive. Until quite recently, no-one knew whether Gömböcs even existed. Even now, Gábor Domokos, one of their discoverers, reckons that in some sense they barely exists at all. So what are Gömböcs and what makes them special?

Tags: mechanics : geometry : equilibrium : gömböc


Feature icon

Computer generated movies and electronic games: Joan Lasenby tells us about the mathematics and engineering behind them.

Tags: computer simulation : vector : geometry : mathematics in films : computer science : computer gaming : computer animation : computer graphics : complex number : quaternion


Feature icon

Cambridge celebrates 25 years since the first very early Universe workshop

Tags: cosmology : geometry : Big Bang : relativity : cosmic microwave background radiation : theory of inflation


Feature icon

Adding weight helps Earth dodge killer asteroids

Tags: ellipse : astronomy : geometry : asteroid : asteroid collision


Feature icon

The Abel Prize 2009 goes to Mikhail Gromov

Tags: geometry : Abel prize : group theory : phase space : metric space


Feature icon

Tilings have adorned buildings from ancient Rome to the Islamic world, from Victorian England to colonial Mexico. But while it sometimes seems free from worldly limitations, tiling is a very precise art, where not much can be left to chance. We can push and turn and wiggle, but if the maths is not right, it isn't going to tile. Josefina Alvarez and Cesar L. Garcia investigate.

Tags: tiling : geometry : tesselation : polygon


Feature icon

Mathematicians offer new proof of quasicrystals' strange electronic properties.

Tags: geometry : aperiodic tiling : penrose tiling : physics : crystallography : Schrödinger equation