See how fractals forever changed math and science

SCIENCE NEWS - ifty years ago, “fractal” was born. In a 1975 book, the Polish-French-American mathematician Benoit B. Mandelbrot coined the term to describe a family of rough, fragmented shapes that fall outside the boundaries of conventional geometry. Mathematicians had been describing these types of shapes since the late 19th century. But by giving them...
By Stephen Ornes | Science News Magazine |
UC Grad Slam 2025 Winners

A tale of Tinder wins the day at the 10th annual UC Grad Slam

Angeliz Vargas Casillas from UC Riverside, who won third prize for her talk on using math to model keloid scar expansion, reflected, “It really made me think about where I'm going with my research. Where can I take it? What is the goal? You have those things in mind, but when you’re putting it together...
By Apollonia Morrill | UC Newsroom |

Understanding bacteria’s metabolism could improve biofuel production

GREEN CAR CONGRESS - Researchers at UC Riverside and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have used mathematical and computational modeling, artificial intelligence algorithms and experiments showing that bacteria have failsafe mechanisms preventing them from producing too many metabolic intermediates. Metabolic intermediates are the chemicals that couple each reaction to one another in metabolism. Key to these...
By Staff | Green Car Congress |
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