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Every Tuesday, editor in chief Samir Patel sits down with writers and editors to discuss our most thought-provoking stories in science and math. Audio editions of Quanta’s stories with Susan Valot ...
Reversible programs run backward as easily as they run forward, saving energy in theory. After decades of research, they may ...
Black hole and Big Bang singularities break our best theory of gravity. A trilogy of theorems hints that physicists must go ...
Manu Prakash works on the world’s most urgent problems and seemingly frivolous questions at the same time. They add up to a ...
Po-Shen Loh discusses his approach to coaching the United States International Mathematical Olympiad team and reveals what he believes to be the major problem with math education.
Mathematicians soon hypothesized that as your set gets bigger, the biggest sum-free subsets will get much larger than N /3.
One computer scientist’s “stunning” proof is the first progress in 50 years on one of the most famous questions in computer ...
Changes in the number, shape, efficiency and interconnectedness of organelles in the cells of flight muscles provide extra ...
On the afternoon of September 30, 1906, a crowd of 200,000 Parisians congregated near the city’s center to watch the premiere of what would become the world’s most prestigious gas balloon race.
From living matter to molecules to elementary particles, the world is made of “chiral” objects that differ from their reflected forms. After her adventures in Wonderland, the fictional Alice stepped ...