Encryption systems rely on “random” numbers, but conventional computers can’t generate them perfectly. New research shows that quantum physics can.
Transformations are the key to such codes, and they rely on math that predates computing as we know it by centuries. There ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Hundreds of UC faculty are urging a return of SAT or ACT test requirements for STEM applicants, citing math ...
Mathematician Will Sawin discusses his experience reviewing and refining a mathematical proof devised by OpenAI's internal ...
Mathematics Professor James Propp is the first UMass Lowell faculty member to win a prestigious yearlong research fellowship ...
After 80 years of fruitless struggle by human mathematicians, a major geometry conjecture has at last been solved—via a straightforward query to a chatbot. “No previous AI-generated proof has come ...
Excel's randomization functions generate values, shuffle datasets, and simulate timelines using simple formulas.
Even the most modern random number generators do not produce perfectly random numbers, which can be a problem for cryptographic applications. ETH Zurich researchers use entangled superconducting ...
A man racially abused, assaulted and threatened to rape police, threatened to stab shop workers in the neck, and hit a man in a pub over the head with a hammer in a three-month period. Cardiff Crown ...
There's no stopping now. Bruce Springsteen announced the Power to the People Festival on Wednesday, May 27 from the stage of Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. where Springsteen and the E Street Band ...
A little more than a year ago, on a trip to Nairobi, Kenya, some colleagues and I met a 12-year-old Masai boy named Richard Turere, who told us a fascinating story. His family raises livestock on the ...