How do we stop poaching? You may think the answer lies in finding a way of giving gamekeepers an advantage over poachers. Oxford Mathematician Tamsin Lee and David Roberts from the University of Kent decided to look at the interaction between rhino poachers and a gamekeeper to predict the outcome of the battle. Their conclusions suggest alternative ways of tackling the problem.

Oxford Mathematician Heather Harrington will be giving the London Mathematical Society (LMS) Popular Lectures this summer in London on 29 June and in September in Birmingham. The Lectures present exciting topics in mathematics and its applications to a wide audience and feature two lecturers who have been chosen for their mathematical distinction and communication skills.  

A tree branch, a ram's horn, your hand - how have these distinct and consistent shapes come about? The growth and form of a biological entity is a complex matter that involves integrated activities across a number of length scales. Viewed at the scale of tissues, or large clusters of cells, understanding growth and form is a problem well suited for continuum mechanics and mathematical modelling.

First combined search for neutrino point-sources in the Southern Hemisphere with the ANTARES and IceCube neutrino telescopes
Adrián-Martínez, S Albert, A André, M Sarkar, S Astrophysical Journal volume 823 issue 1 (23 May 2016)
Fri, 17 Jun 2016

11:00 - 12:00
C2

Period rings II

Constantin Ardakov
(Oxford)
Abstract

Continuation of the last talk.

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