SidemenReacts on MSNOpinion
Real moments that should be impossible
From perfect timing to impossible angles, every moment challenges what you expect from real footage. The reactions and ...
A decades-old geometry puzzle has finally been solved by a young mathematician in South Korea. Hidden behind a simple hallway ...
In 1966, a mathematician named [Leo Moser] proposed what sounds like a simple problem: What’s the largest shape you can move ...
How a mix-up over Ramanujan films and a book on non-European mathematics reveals the profound difference between intuitive ...
It's the most famous promo in the history of TNA Wrestling, but here are some more details on the legend that is "Steiner ...
The Chosun Ilbo on MSN
South Korean researcher solves 60-year-old sofa problem
A South Korean researcher who solved the “moving sofa problem,” a mathematical puzzle that had remained unsolved for nearly ...
Math students may not blink at calculating probabilities, measuring the area beneath curves or evaluating matrices, yet they often find themselves at sea when first confronted with writing proofs. But ...
Chinese artificial intelligence company DeepSeek has released a mathematical reasoning model that can identify and correct its own errors. The model beat the best human score in one of the world’s ...
Some of the many paths that can be taken through the mathematical space SO(3), corresponding to sequences of rotations in real space. Credit: Tsvi Tlusty. If you twist something — say, spin a top or ...
A high school teacher didn't expect a solution when she set a 2,000-year-old Pythagorean Theorem problem in front of her students. Then Calcea Johnson and Ne'Kiya Jackson stepped up to the challenge.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results