Saving lives: the mathematics of tomography
Not so long ago, if you had a medical complaint, doctors had to open you up to see what it was. These days sophisticated imaging techniques save you the risk and pain of an operation. Chris Budd and Cathryn Mitchell look at the maths that is responsible for these medical techniques, and also for much of the digital revolution.
Understanding uncertainty: The maths of surprises
Editorial
- I need maths like a carburettor recalibration
- The 118 188 challenge
Catching primes
Alan Turing: ahead of his time
Alan Turing is the father of computer science and contributed significantly to the WW2 effort, but his life came to a tragic end. Stefan Kopieczek explores his story.
A glimpse of Cantor's paradise
Peter Macgregor explores the beautiful world of the infinite.
Number crunching ants
Fermat's last theorem and Andrew Wiles
Neil Pieprzak tells the fascinating story of Andrew Wiles who, with intense devotion and in secret, proved a deceptively simple-looking conjecture that had defeated mathematicians for almost 400 years.