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- Ten Recent Questions for ChatGPT
- A Visit to the Israeli Quantum Computing Center (IQCC)
- Computational Complexity and Explanations in Physics
- Kazhdan Seminar fall 2025 – Starting Today Oct. 19, 2026.
- Explicit Lossless Vertex Expanders!
- Dror Bar-Natan and Roland Van der Veen – A Fast, Strong, and Fun knot invariant!
- Polynomial Bounds for Chowla’s Cosine Problem
- Maria-Romina Ivan and Sean Jaffe: The saturation number for the diamond is linear
- Richard Montgomery and Lisa Sauermann Present Major Progress on Rota’s Basis Conjecture
Top Posts & Pages
- Ten Recent Questions for ChatGPT
- Test Your Intuition 56: Fifteen Boxes Puzzle
- Dror Bar-Natan and Roland Van der Veen - A Fast, Strong, and Fun knot invariant!
- A Visit to the Israeli Quantum Computing Center (IQCC)
- Quantum Computers: A Brief Assessment of Progress in the Past Decade
- Computational Complexity and Explanations in Physics
- Two Very Early Problems, a Simple Solution, and a New Problem
- What is the maximum number of Tverberg's partitions?
- The Argument Against Quantum Computers - A Very Short Introduction
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Monthly Archives: May 2013
Joram’s Memorial Conference
Joram Lindenstrauss 1936-2012 This week our local Institute of Advanced Study holds a memorial conference for Joram Lindenstrauss. Joram was an immensely powerful mathematician, in terms of originality and conceptual vision, in terms of technical power, in terms of courage to confront … Continue reading
Andriy Bondarenko Showed that Borsuk’s Conjecture is False for Dimensions Greater Than 65!
The news in brief Andriy V. Bondarenko proved in his remarkable paper The Borsuk Conjecture for two-distance sets that the Borsuk’s conjecture is false for all dimensions greater than 65. This is a substantial improvement of the earlier record (all dimensions … Continue reading
Why is mathematics possible?
Spectacular advances in number theory Last weeks we heard about two spectacular results in number theory. As announced in Nature, Yitang Zhang proved that there are infinitely many pairs of consecutive primes which are at most 70 million apart! This is a sensational achievement. … Continue reading
Dan Mostow on Haaretz and Other Updates
Enlightenment at a red traffic light Wolf Prize laureate Prof. George Daniel Mostow made his greatest scientific breakthrough while driving. Haaretz tells the story of how Dan Mostow reached his breakthrough known as Mostow’s rigidity theorem. Congratulations, Dan! French-Isreali Meeting … Continue reading
Test Your Intuition (21): Auctions
You run a single-item sealed bid auction where you sell an old camera. There are three bidders and the value of the camera for each of them is described by a certain (known) random variable: With probability 0.9 the value … Continue reading
Posted in Economics, Games, Test your intuition
Tagged Auctions, Roger Myerson, Test your intuition
4 Comments
Oz’ Balls Problem: The Solution
A commentator named Oz proposed the following question: You have a box with n red balls and n blue balls. You take out each time a ball at random but, if the ball was red, you put it back in the box and take out … Continue reading
Posted in Probability, Test your intuition
Tagged Erosion, J. F. C. Kingman, Probability, S. E. Volkov
1 Comment
Answer: Lord Kelvin, The Age of the Earth, and the Age of the Sun
Yeshu Kolodni and Lord Kelvin The question In 1862, the physicist William Thomson (who later became Lord Kelvin) of Glasgow published calculations that fixed the age of Earth at between 20 million and 400 … Continue reading
Posted in Geology, Physics, Test your intuition
10 Comments
Test your Intuition/Knowledge: What was Lord Kelvin’s Main Mistake?
The age of the earth (Thanks to Yeshu Kolodny) We now know that the age of the earth is 4.54±1% Billion years. From Wikipedea: In 1862, the physicist William Thomson (who later became Lord Kelvin) of Glasgow published calculations that … Continue reading
Posted in Controversies and debates, Geology, Physics, Test your intuition
Tagged Earth, Geology, Lord Kelvin, Test your intuition
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Indian Crested Porcupine
For a few days we had an Indian Crested Porcupine (דורבן) in our garden. It ate all the flowers and dug an impressive array of tunnels.
New Ramanujan Graphs!
Margulis’ paper Ramanujan graphs were constructed independently by Margulis and by Lubotzky, Philips and Sarnak (who also coined the name). The picture above shows Margulis’ paper where the graphs are defined and their girth is studied. (I will come back to the question … Continue reading