Srinivasa Ramanujan grew up poor in India with no formal university training in mathematics. Yet the formulas he mailed to Cambridge stunned some of the greatest minds of the time. G.H. Hardy ...
The passing of Diosdado “Dado” Banatao on December 25 invites a nation to pause, remember, and give thanks. Few Filipinos have left as profound an ...
Ramanujan’s insights into pi are now guiding scientists toward a deeper understanding of how the universe works.
SiliconRepublic.com asked researchers we’ve profiled throughout the year to tell us about their unsung heroes of science.
It was in the year 1914 that Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan came to Cambridge with a notebook filled with 17 extraordinary infinite series for 1/π. They were not only efficient but also gave ...
Educators and administrators in recent years have been eager to reimagine math instruction. Troubled by high failure rates in ...
Hidden Fibonacci numbers, a new shape and the search for a grand unified theory of mathematics are among our choices for most ...
Tech companies are claiming machines more intelligent than us and capable of having their own agendas are just around the ...
Nuclear fusion. People on Mars. Artificial general intelligence. These are just some of the advances that could come by the ...
Hull: The next generation, a huge reservoir of talent, gets a lot more advice about building a personal brand than about ...
Somewhere at the edge of mathematics lurks a number so large that it breaks the very foundations of our understanding - and ...
Bill Nye: Cornell University alum, Boeing engineer, comedian, and, yes, the center of the breakout series Bill Nye the Science Guy. The children's educational series, first airing in 1993, became one ...