Up until now, the simulation hypothesis was deemed to be un-testable in philosophy and science and often dismissed as pure science fiction.
The proof, known to be so hard that a mathematician once offered 10 martinis to whoever could figure it out, uses number theory to explain quantum fractals.
In today's high-tech world, math is everywhere.  From numbers, statistics, algorithms, percentages, and data trends, math surrounds us. Whether we know it or not, our numeric literacy — if we can ...
In a world dominated by algorithms, it's common to associate them with a negative bias. Mathematician Clara Grima defends ...
Pope Leo XIV on Oct. 30 addressed hundreds of university students as part of the Jubilee of the World of Education.
Learning to code doesn’t require new brain systems—it builds on the ones we already use for logic and reasoning.
As distribution companies absorb electric vehicle (EV) load growth, aging assets, extreme weather and a decarbonizing grid, ...
UC Santa Barbara computer scientist Daniel Lokshtanov is advancing fundamental understanding of computational efficiency through groundbreaking research on quasi-polynomial time algorithms, supported ...
Daniel Lokshtanov’s work explores the limits of what computers can solve, paving the way for advances in artificial intelligence and computational efficiency.
"It feels like India was the cultural superpower of Asia in that period," he said. Historian William Dalrymple said innovations like chess and zero originated in India, not Greece or Egypt India was a ...