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University of Oxford Maths Fan Online Lecture Series

4.6K views· 152 likes· 16:21· May 21, 2024

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Get your tickets - only £55 for all 5 talks - here: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/courses/maths-fan-online-lecture-series Each speaker will give a 1-hour pre-recorded lecture, which will be live-streamed (with an interactive element) each week at 7-8.30pm BST (UTC+1). All the lectures will then remain available to review until Thursday 11 July. The full programme is outlined below. 7pm (GMT+1) Thursday 6 June 2024 The equation that ruined my life (for four years) Simon Clark @SimonClark Most of my PhD was spent bashing my head against a brick wall of how to solve one, deceptively simple, equation. How hard can it be to disentangle the influence of different parts of the atmosphere on the surface? In order to answer that question, I will introduce you to the basics of atmospheric dynamics, numerical problem solving, and how a PhD teaches you to think like a scientist (and own your mistakes). 7pm (GMT+1) Thursday 13 June 2024 "I wasn't expecting that..." Rob Eastaway As humans we depend on our intuition to make many of our decisions. And most of the time it works. But when intuition doesn’t work it can go spectacularly wrong. Rob Eastaway reveals some of his favourite examples, including several that relate to everyday situations, and reflects on why mathematicians so often seem to delight in the counter-intuitive. Brace yourself for some surprises... and be prepared to get things wrong. 7pm (GMT+1) Thursday 20 June 2024 How to get rich quick Sophie Maclean From fairground games to the stock market, knowing what will happen is a great advantage. In this session, Sophie gives an introduction to the world of finance and shares some of the Maths she used working as a trader. 7pm (GMT+1) Thursday 27 June 2024 Alan Turing and the Enigma Machine James Grime @singingbanana Alan Turing is best remembered as one of the leading code breakers of Bletchley Park during World War II. It was Turing's brilliant insights and mathematical mind that helped to break Enigma, the apparently unbreakable code used by the German military. We present a history of both Alan Turing and the Enigma machine, leading to this triumph of mathematical ingenuity. 7pm (GMT+1) Thursday 4 July 2024 Pokemaths: the maths of the video game Tom Crawford How many Pikachus does it take to power a lightbulb? How much do you need to feed your pet Charizard? And why does the world of Pokémon seem to ignore the basic laws of physics? Dr Tom Crawford looks at the maths of one of the world’s favourite video games. Tickets here: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/courses/maths-fan-online-lecture-series Produced by Dr Tom Crawford at the University of Oxford. Tom is Public Engagement Lead at the Oxford University Department of Continuing Education: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/profiles/tom-crawford For more maths content check out Tom's website https://tomrocksmaths.com/ You can also follow Tom on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @tomrocksmaths. https://www.facebook.com/tomrocksmaths/ https://twitter.com/tomrocksmaths https://www.instagram.com/tomrocksmaths/ Get your Tom Rocks Maths merchandise here: https://www.beautifulequation.com/collections/tom-rocks-maths

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