What We Know About Monkeypox

Even though we’ve learned a lot about this relative of smallpox, some mysteries remain due to a lack of political will. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Room-Temperature Superconductivity Claim Falls Apart [Update]

In 2020, researchers reported that they had created a room-temperature superconductor. That paper has now been retracted. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

How Big Is Infinity?

Of all the endless questions children and mathematicians have asked about infinity, one of the most fascinating has to do with its size. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

High-Temperature Superconductivity Understood at Last

A new atomic-scale experiment all but settles the origin of the strong form of superconductivity seen in cuprate crystals, confirming a 35-year-old theory. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Physicists Rewrite a Quantum Rule That Clashes with Our Universe

The past and the future are tightly linked in conventional quantum mechanics. Perhaps too tightly. A tweak to the theory could let quantum possibilities increase as space expands. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Mathematical Curves Enable Advanced Communication

A simple geometric idea has been used to power advances in information theory, cryptography and even blockchain technology. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Richard Rusczyk Is a Math Evangelist Who Preaches Problem-Solving

Richard Rusczyk, founder of Art of Problem Solving, has a vision for bringing “joyous, beautiful math” — and problem-solving — to classrooms everywhere. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

The AI Researcher Giving Her Field Its Bitter Medicine

Anima Anandkumar wants computer scientists to move beyond the matrix, among other challenges. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Epigenetic ‘Clocks’ Predict Animals’ True Biological Age

A statistical analysis of chemical tags on DNA may help unify disparate theories of aging. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Help Star Trek’s Lieutenant Uhura Overcome Astronomical Odds

In honor of the actor and activist Nichelle Nichols, this month’s puzzle imagines a Star Trek adventure in which her character, Lieutenant Uhura, faces a life-and-death conundrum. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

A Numerical Mystery from the 19th Century Finally Gets Solved

Two mathematicians have proven Patterson’s conjecture, which was designed to explain a strange pattern in sums involving prime numbers. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Self-Taught AI Shows Similarities to How the Brain Works

Self-supervised learning allows a neural network to figure out for itself what matters. The process might be what makes our own brains so successful. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

What Is Quantum Field Theory and Why Is It Incomplete?

Quantum field theory may be the most successful scientific theory of all time, but there’s reason to think it’s missing something. Steven Strogatz speaks with theoretical physicist David Tong about this enigmatic theory. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Mathematicians crack a simple but stubborn class of equations

Ever since Archimedes, mathematicians have been fascinated by equations that involve a difference between squares. Now two mathematicians have proven how often these equations have solutions, concluding a decades-old quest. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

From working at Subway to one of the greatest mathematicians (2015)

Two years ago, Yitang Zhang was virtually unknown. Now his surprise solution to a major problem in number theory has catapulted him to mathematical stardom. Where does he go from here? | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

How the Physics of Nothing Underlies Everything

The key to understanding the origin and fate of the universe may be a more complete understanding of the vacuum. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

A Biochemist’s View of Life’s Origin Reframes Cancer and Aging

The biochemist Nick Lane thinks life first evolved in hydrothermal vents where precursors of metabolism appeared before genetic information. His ideas could lead us to think differently about aging and cancer. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Black holes finally proven mathematically stable

The solutions to Einstein’s equations that describe a spinning black hole won’t blow up, even when poked or prodded. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

The Computer Scientist Trying to Teach AI to Learn Like We Do

Christopher Kanan is building algorithms that can continuously learn over time — the way we do. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

The Most Famous Paradox in Physics Nears Its End

In a landmark series of calculations, physicists have proved that black holes can shed information. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Particle Physicists Puzzle over a New Duality

A hidden link has been found between two seemingly unrelated particle collision outcomes. It’s the latest example of a mysterious web of mathematical connections between disparate theories of physics. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Why Do We Get Old, and Can Aging Be Reversed?

Everybody gets older, but not everyone ages in the same way. In this episode, Steven Strogatz speaks with Judith Campisi and Dena Dubal, two biomedical researchers who study the aging process. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Seeking Mathematical Truth in Counterfeit Coin Puzzles

Readers balanced logical reasoning and mathematical insights to find phony coins with a double-pan balance scale. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Neuronal Scaffolding Plays Unexpected Role in Pain

Perineuronal nets, rigid structures that hold certain neurons in place, affect a surprising amount of brain activity, including some associated with chronic pain. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Hidden Chaos Found to Lurk in Ecosystems

New research finds that chaos plays a bigger role in population dynamics than decades of ecological data seemed to suggest. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

A Question About a Rotating Line Helps Reveal What Makes Real Numbers Special

The Kakeya conjecture predicts how much room you need to point a line in every direction. In one number system after another — with one important exception — mathematicians have been proving it true. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Two Weeks In, the Webb Space Telescope Is Reshaping Astronomy

In the days after the mega-telescope started delivering data, astronomers reported new discoveries about galaxies, stars, exoplanets and even Jupiter. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Researchers Read the Sugary ‘Language’ on Cell Surfaces

Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

How the ‘Diamond of the Plant World’ Helped Land Plants Evolve

Structural studies of the robust material called sporopollenin reveal how it made plants hardy enough to reproduce on dry land. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Computer Science Proof Unveils Unexpected Form of Entanglement

Three computer scientists have solved the NLTS conjecture, proving that systems of entangled particles can remain difficult to analyze even away from extremes. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Mass and Angular Momentum, Left Ambiguous by Einstein, Get Defined

Surprisingly, 107 years after the introduction of general relativity, the meanings of basic concepts are still being worked out. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

How Do Mathematicians Know Their Proofs Are Correct?

What makes a proof stronger than a guess? What does evidence look like in the realm of mathematical abstraction? Hear the mathematician Melanie Matchett Wood explain how probability helps to guide number theorists toward certainty. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Embryo Cells Set Patterns for Growth by Pushing and Pulling

Patterns that guide the development of feathers and other features can be set by mechanical forces in the embryo, not just by gradients of chemicals. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Quantum Algorithms Conquer a New Kind of Problem

Computer scientists have found a new type of problem that quantum computers can solve dramatically faster than their classical counterparts. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

In Times of Scarcity, War and Peace, a Ukrainian Finds the Magic in Math

With her homeland mired in war, the sphere-packing number theorist Maryna Viazovska has become the second woman to win a Fields Medal in the award’s 86-year history. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

June Huh wasn’t interested in mathematics until a chance encounter during his sixth year of college. Now his profound insights connecting combinatorics and geometry have led to math’s highest honor. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

The Scientist Who Developed a New Way to Understand Communication

Mark Braverman has spent his career translating thorny problems into the language of information complexity. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

2022 Fields and Abacus Medals

Explore Quanta’s 2022 Fields and Abacus Medals coverage. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

For His Sporting Approach to Math, a Fields Medal

With Hugo Duminil-Copin, thinking rarely happens without moving. His insights into the flow-related properties of complex networks have earned him the Fields Medal. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

A Solver of the Hardest Easy Problems About Prime Numbers

On his way to winning a Fields Medal, James Maynard has cut a path through simple-sounding questions about prime numbers that have stumped mathematicians for centuries. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

He Dropped Out to Become a Poet. Now He’s Won a Fields Medal

June Huh wasn’t interested in mathematics until a chance encounter during his sixth year of college. Now his profound insights connecting combinatorics and geometry have led to math’s highest honor. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Scientists Pin Down When Earth’s Crust Cracked, Then Came to Life (2021)

New data indicating that Earth’s surface broke up about 3.2 billion years ago helps clarify how plate tectonics drove the evolution of complex life. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Mathematicians Resurrect Hilberts 13th Problem (2021)

Long considered solved, David Hilbert’s question about seventh-degree polynomials is leading researchers to a new web of mathematical connections. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Life Helps Make Almost Half of Earth’s Minerals

A new origins-based system for classifying minerals reveals the huge geochemical imprint that life has left on Earth. It could help us identify other worlds with life too. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

The Sordid Past of the Cubic Formula

The quest to solve cubic equations led to duels, betrayals — and modern mathematics. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Controversy Continues over Whether Hot Water Freezes Faster Than Cold

Decades after a Tanzanian teenager initiated study of the “Mpemba effect,” the effort to confirm or refute it is leading physicists toward new theories about how substances relax to equilibrium. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Can Computers Be Mathematicians?

Artificial intelligence has bested humans at problem-solving challenges like chess and Go. Is mathematics research next? Steven Strogatz speaks with mathematician Kevin Buzzard to learn about the effort to translate math into language that computers understand. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago

Protein Blobs Linked to Alzheimer’s Affect Aging in All Cells

Protein buildups like those seen around neurons in Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and other brain diseases occur in all aging cells, a new study suggests. Learning their significance may reveal new strategies for treating age-related diseases. | Continue reading


@quantamagazine.org | 2 years ago