We have a full tally of the elementary particles, but the deeper you go into that count, the more complicated — and weirder — the answer becomes. https://t.co/5Aa8yPvqRx
Algebra spoken in six different languages and a mathematical sing-along in a language spoken by over a billion people. The latest from the Tower of Babel.
Six CMS members were named Fellows by the Fields Institute last week. Congratulations!
Six membres de la SMC ont été nommés Fellows de l'Institut Fields la semaine dernière. Félicitations !
News release / communiqué : https://t.co/osALxeiSts
Unit 8: The sphere formula, the last unit of the second week in https://t.co/HTY3O3pYwB It is a cool formula that implies for example that every odd dimensional manifold has Euler characteristic 0.
#shorts#maths https://t.co/LN1JK6Mwv2 via @YouTube
What happens when quantum computing meets robotics?
Watch highlights from our very first live #TheQuantumKid event at Innovation Park Zurich, where around 100 people - many of them kids - joined us to explore #quantum, meet the incredible #ANYmal robot dog from @anybotics, and dive into our conversation with Prof. John @preskill and Prof. @Ken_Goldberg!
Watch: https://t.co/yNwRXKeBSe
via @YouTube
#QuantumComputing #Robotics #STEM #IPZ #WomeninRobotics
Check out our latest episode with @JuliaAngwin on why journalism should work more like a mathematical proof than a pile of quotes, her latest book "On Courage," and why she may be a mathematical dissident.
https://t.co/VdFvLJROBE
On this day in 1831, Siméon Poisson issued a famously dismissive report on the groundbreaking memoir of Évariste Galois. Galois's work on polynomial equations later became foundational for modern abstract algebra (Galois Theory). See more here https://t.co/aCORp3e8TG
We are delighted to announce Professor Ruth Charney (@BrandeisU), Professor Catharina Stroppel (@UniBonn and @HCM_Bonn) and Professor Akshay Venkatesh (@the_IAS) have been elected as Honorary Member of the Society in 2026.
Full citations ➡️ https://t.co/NR3e3fdEnQ
Hilbert's 23 problems are "the lifeblood of mathematics," according to mathematics historian Jeremy Gray. They include questions about the foundations of #math, number theory, geometry, analysis and algebra — and some remain unsolved to this day.
Learn more about the history of these fascinating problems: https://t.co/ZM7vKCP5JX
Last Day: AMS Summer Reading Sale!
Hot off the press!
Take a behind-the-scenes look at the AMS print shop as a new History of Mathematics volume on Andreas Floer comes to life.
There's no better time to add to your reading list—shop the AMS Summer Reading Sale and save up to 35%.
Watch here: https://t.co/6bjCIOZApH
Shop here: https://t.co/QLsABDulnu
Heading to Cleveland for #SIAMAN26, #SIAMED26, #SIAMLS26, or #SIAMMPE26?
Stop by the SIAM booths to say hello, browse books and journals, and connect with SIAM staff. 👋
📅 Plan your conference experience:https://t.co/JwEQxQzLak
“We almost have gone from having too many early galaxies to having too many theories to explain them,” said Rachel Somerville, a senior research scientist at the Flatiron Institute. https://t.co/8bu0Wa35kn