Leila Sloman

Contributing Correspondent

Latest Articles

Graduate Student Solves Classic Problem About the Limits of Addition

May 22, 2025

A new proof illuminates the hidden patterns that emerge when addition becomes impossible.

New Proof Settles Decades-Old Bet About Connected Networks

April 18, 2025

According to mathematical legend, Peter Sarnak and Noga Alon made a bet about optimal graphs in the late 1980s. They’ve now both been proved wrong.

After 20 Years, Math Couple Solves Major Group Theory Problem

February 19, 2025

Britta Späth has dedicated her career to proving a single, central conjecture. She’s finally succeeded, alongside her partner, Marc Cabanes.

‘Groups’ Underpin Modern Math. Here’s How They Work.

September 6, 2024

What do the integers have in common with the symmetries of a triangle? In the 19th century, mathematicians invented groups as an answer to this question.

Grad Students Find Inevitable Patterns in Big Sets of Numbers

August 5, 2024

A new proof marks the first progress in decades on a problem about how order emerges from disorder.

In Highly Connected Networks, There’s Always a Loop

June 7, 2024

Mathematicians show that graphs of a certain common type must contain a route that visits each point exactly once.

Geometers Engineer New Tools to Wrangle Spacecraft Orbits

April 15, 2024

Mathematicians think abstract tools from a field called symplectic geometry might help with planning missions to far-off moons and planets.

Number of Distances Separating Points Has a New Bound

April 9, 2024

Mathematicians have struggled to prove Falconer’s Conjecture, a simple, but far-reaching, hypothesis about the distances between points. They’re finally getting close.

Maze Proof Establishes a ‘Backbone’ for Statistical Mechanics

February 7, 2024

Four mathematicians have estimated the chances that there’s a clear path through a random maze.

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