features...
Steven J. Brams uses the Cuban missile crisis to illustrate
the Theory of Moves, which
is not just an abstract mathematical model but one that mirrors the
real-life choices, and underlying thinking, of flesh-and-blood decision
makers.
Last October, two mathematicians won £1m when it was revealed
that they were the first to solve the Eternity jigsaw puzzle. It had
taken them six months and a generous helping of mathematical
analysis. Mark Wainwright meets the pair and finds out how they
did it.
Why can't human beings walk as fast as they run?
And why do we prefer to break into a run rather than walk above
a certain speed?
Using mathematical
modelling, R. McNeill Alexander finds some
answers.
Arguably, the exponential function crops up more than any other when
using mathematics to describe the physical world. In the first of two
articles on physical phenomena which obey exponential laws,
Ian Garbett discusses light
attenuation - the way in which light decreases in intensity as it
passes through a medium.
Jenni Barker plots the path from astrophysics to
science journalism.