Yearly Archives: 2011

Thank you!

Dear reader, we are excited to announce that, for the first time in the history of the universe, AskAMathematician.com has broken 100,000 page views in a single month! This is significant because it is approximately the number of fingers that … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, -- By the Physicist | 8 Comments

Mathematical proof of the existence of God.

Physicist: This derivation isn’t particularly easy, but bear with me.  It’s essentially a re-phrasing of a joint work by Descartes, Godel, and Hawking. Beginning with the unitarity of quantum probability you find the non-vanishing deism coefficient manifest. The set of … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, April Fools | 50 Comments

Video: Getting Computers to Learn

An introduction to machine learning (a form of artificial intelligence concerned with getting computers to learn from data), and a discussion of some of the mathematics underlying machine learning algorithms. Part 1 of 4: Part 2 of 4: Part 3 … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, Computer Science, Machine Learning & A.I., Videos | 6 Comments

Q: What is going on in a nuclear reactor, and what happens during a meltdown?

Physicist: Nuclear reactors are very 19th century in a way. The nuclear fuel is basically a bunch of very hot metal, and the more of it you get together in one place, the hotter it gets.  That heat is used … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Particle Physics, Physics | 10 Comments

Q: How do I find the love of my life? (a Mathematician’s perspective)

Mathematician: The Physicist and I were once asked “how do I find the love of my life?”. Never ones to shy away from applying math to love (or anything else), the Physicist gave his take on this question (noting the … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, Biology, Equations, Philosophical, Probability | 24 Comments

Q: Are all atoms radioactive?

The original question was: Some elementary particles spontaneously break apart at a given rate. Can the same be said about normally stable atoms and molecules? That is, even though they are stable, does their natural internal activity lead to a … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Particle Physics, Physics, Quantum Theory | 5 Comments