Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists complete Schrödinger’s 100-year-old color theory using geometry
A team at Los Alamos National Laboratory has completed a mathematical framework for human color perception that Nobel Prize-winning physicist Erwin Schrodinger first sketched more than a century ago.
Bright streaks on a small asteroid moon looked, at first, like a camera problem. They were faint, fan-shaped, and easy to ...
The shift from 2D pixels to 3D spatial intelligence is no longer theoretical. Hitem3D 2.0 proves that AI 3D foundation models have evolved from experimental prototypes into industrial engines - ...
Here we take a closer look at the latest Kansas City Chiefs 2026 NFL mock draft projections after the NFL Combine.
From blast wave physics to UHPC concrete and polyurea coatings, this article explores how layered design strategies help ...
On structural resilience, Infinite 60-cell mono-glass variants use 3.2mm front glass, approximately 60% thicker than the front glass on some dual-glass TOPCon products and carry certification for 35mm ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Why knots come undone in 4D, but 2D surfaces can still be knotted
Tie a trefoil knot in a piece of string, seal the ends together, and try to wiggle it free without cutting. In three-dimensional space, the knot holds firm. Add a fourth spatial dimension, however, ...
Highschoolers from across the region flocked to WKU Friday to test their math skills in competition, and the chance to take home a $500 scholarship. The 4th Annual Math Contest consisted of Scantron ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists overturn 150-year-old geometry rule using twin donut-like torus surfaces
Researchers in the US and Germany have solved a mathematical problem that has puzzled ...
David Cutler is in the spotlight for his work on a tasty-sounding mathematics problem. In January, the New York Times featured a research paper authored by Cutler and Neil Sloane, the founder of The ...
No two snowflakes may be the same, but models that fail to take these variations into consideration often fall short when ...
In this simulation, 66 of the 100 needles crossed a line (you can count ’em). Using this number, we get a value of pi at 3.0303—which is not 3.14—but it's not terrible for just 100 needles. With ...
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