Articles in the Category: Math

Turning the iPhone into the SciPhone

Turning the iPhone into the SciPhone
Just over a year old, the Apple iTunes App Store is churning out–or rather independent developers are–applications to calculate tips, find restaurants and even play countless games. But there is little for the science-interested smart phone users. Oh sure, among the tens of thousands of...

Puzzling Math

Puzzling Math
For 35 years, the Rubik’s Cube has been puzzling people and teaching science. Starting with its inventor, Erno Rubik, first used his “magic cube” to demonstrate three-dimensional design to his architecture students. Now mathematicians across the world are employing the brightly-colored...

Georgia Girls Shine as Stars of Science

Georgia Girls Shine as Stars of Science
Summer is no time for idle minds. About 70 Georgia girls are getting a crash course in crime scene investigation, astronomy, dinosaurs and chemistry, neuroscience, computer science and mathematics. The goal of the Women in the Sciences summer camp is to interest young women in pursuing careers in science. Other...

Science For All

Science For All
In a move to take science from the lab and place it in the public square, the World Science Festival is about to start its second year of inciting curiosity. REALscience talked with organizer and physicist Brian Greene to hear what we can expect at this year’s festival. Photo: Physicist and Co-Founder...

Science Fair Season

Science Fair Season
Science is in the air across the nation as students showcase their discoveries, research projects and compete for scholarships. The biggest science and engineering fair is underway in Reno, Nevada. Visit the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair to learn more. Students from all over the Pacific...

Counting Casualties in the Math Wars

Counting Casualties in the Math Wars
The battle line in the math wars separates reform math from traditional. It pits new, fuzzier, inquiry-based learning against rote memorization of fundamental math facts. And, it’s been boiling in school districts across the country for over 30 years. The latest battleground is Seattle, WA, where...

Dr. Stephen Hawking Seriously Ill

Dr. Stephen Hawking Seriously Ill
Famed mathematician Stephen Hawking has been rushed to a hospital and is seriously ill, Cambridge University said Monday.

Catch the Geocaching Wave

Catch the Geocaching Wave
Technology and treasure are pushing people to get out and explore parks, mountain peaks and back alleys in cities. It’s all part of geocaching, a nine-year-old GPS adventure game that is becoming a popular global sport. And, while geocaching has its roots in navigation and exploration it is backyard...

Pi Gal

Pi Gal
Kurt Godden is a General Motors in an Operations Research scientist with a daughter who loves pi. Not the kind with berries or cream. But the number that starts with 3.14….and goes and goes and goes. Here she recites the first 500 numbers of pi but she memorized the first 2,000 digits. Let’s...

Mysteries of Math

Mysteries of Math
Dr. Mario Livio, an astrophysicist at the Hubble Space Telescope Science Institute, loves numbers and sees them everywhere, in nature and in the cosmos. But where does math, the complex language of numbers come from? Has it always been there for us to find or is mathematics just another human creation?...

Math Teacher Sells Ad Space on Tests

When faced with a shortfall in his copying budget, math teacher Tom Farber decided to pay for the paper he puts his calculus tests on by selling ad space on them.

Six Degrees of Internet Black Holes

Six Degrees of Internet Black Holes
Hidden Metric Space, courtesy of CAIDA, San Diego Supercomputer Center, UC San Diego. Scientists are worried that the Internet is becoming a clogged superhighway, complete with bottlenecks where information seems to disappear. These electronic misfires are called Internet black holes. And, they seem...

Year of Science on the Horizon

Year of Science on the Horizon
2009 has been declared the Year of Science. A group of scientific organizations has formed a network to promote science to the public. With many milestones being celebrated next year, Year of Science 2009 will celebrate the people, the process and procedures of science. To find out more visit: YearofScience2009.org UnderstandingScience.org ...

Counting on Number Sense

Counting on Number Sense
1, 2, 3, 4, how do you improve your math score? Well, start by getting good at estimating numbers of objects in groups. New research shows that good “number sense” translates to higher standardized math test scores. Counting on Number Sense [ 2:59 ]

10-year-old Science Whizz

Just as school is getting ready to start, here’s a story from across the pond that will make you want to pick up some light reading for your ,. A ten-year-old Manchester, England boy (and his mother) both received a B grade in science. The pair took the equivalent of the science SAT and passed...

Natural Beauty

Natural Beauty
Spirals on a Conch Shell Sometimes the world seems too complex to be natural. But scientist continually prove that nature is both complicated and natural. From a butterfly’s wings to the perfect spirals of a seashell, it’s all just patterns. Now new research is showing how cells migrate–also...

Game for a Cure

Game for a Cure
Human Fyn protein, courtesy of University of Washington A group of scientists is banking on the world to help solve some big diseases. Cures to finding proteins to stop cancer, Alzheimer’s or HIV may lie in global game players. A new online videogame project, called FoldIt is looking for players...

Musical Math

Musical Math
Courtesy of Lukesh Every musical note strikes a mathematical chord. And, now a group of scientists has found some complex shapes in the music even before geometric mathematicians can describe them. In this week’s issue of Science magazine three music theorists describe the advanced geometry...

Year in Review

Year in Review
2007 was a big year for science—and REALscience. From weird weather events to extraordinary discoveries in space, the year was full of all kinds of science. It was the beginning of the International Polar Year. Global warming dominated the news. Science was under political attack. But the biggest...

Picture This

Picture This
Soon taking a stroll through the landmarks of Europe will be as easy as opening a digital map. Wait a couple of years and all the major landmarks of the world—from St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome to the Statue of Liberty will be digitally reconstructed using other people’s vacation photos....

Quantum Order

Quantum Order
Dr. Collin Broholm It’s not a Harry Potter-esque secret society. But it is a bit mystical. Quantum order extends over many atoms and is not confined to an individual atom. Quantum Order [ 1:16 ]

Port Math

Port Math
Port congestion is becoming a problem and with nowhere to build cranes might hold the answer. Port Math [ 1:20 ]

Earthrace Ends

Earthrace Ends
photo by Lance Wordsworth A world record attempt at being the first biodiesel powered motor boat to circumnavigate the globe has been thwarted. The 50-day Earthrace journey came to an abrupt halt on the shores of Spain this week. It would have been the first boat to attempt such a feat fueled by...

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