As part of our series of research articles deliberately focusing on the rigour and intricacies of mathematics, we look at Oxford Mathematician Minyhong Kim's research in to the relationship between number theory and topology. Minhyong Kim is Professor of Number Theory here in Oxford and Fellow of Merton College.

It is probably well-known that number theory is the source of some of the oldest and most accessible questions in mathematics:

Astrophysical neutrinos and cosmic rays observed by IceCube
Aartsen, M Ackermann, M Adams, J Aguilar, J Ahlers, M Ahrens, M Altmann, D Andeen, K Anderson, T Ansseau, I Anton, G Archinger, M Argüelles, C Auffenberg, J Axani, S Bai, X Barwick, S Baum, V Bay, R Beatty, J Becker Tjus, J Becker, K BenZvi, S Berley, D Bernardini, E Bernhard, A Besson, D Binder, G Bindig, D Bissok, M Blaufuss, E Blot, S Bohm, C Börner, M Bos, F Bose, D Böser, S Botner, O Braun, J Brayeur, L Bretz, H Bron, S Burgman, A Carver, T Casier, M Cheung, E Chirkin, D Christov, A Clark, K Classen, L Coenders, S Collin, G Conrad, J Cowen, D Cross, R Day, M de André, J De Clercq, C del Pino Rosendo, E Dembinski, H De Ridder, S Desiati, P de Vries, K de Wasseige, G de With, M DeYoung, T Díaz-Vélez, J di Lorenzo, V Dujmovic, H Dumm, J Dunkman, M Eberhardt, B Ehrhardt, T Eichmann, B Eller, P Euler, S Evenson, P Fahey, S Fazely, A Feintzeig, J Felde, J Filimonov, K Finley, C Flis, S Fösig, C Franckowiak, A Friedman, E Fuchs, T Gaisser, T Gallagher, J Gerhardt, L Ghorbani, K Giang, W Gladstone, L Glauch, T Glüsenkamp, T Advances in Space Research (30 May 2017)
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