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  • Arnold & Landau
  • Meet Neil Turok

    Events5 Jun

    Meet Neil Turok

    In a new video, Neil Turok discusses the future of theoretical physics, the impact of AI and how to build institutes for fundamental science.

  • Deep-layer distribution

    Papers1 Jun

    Deep-layer distribution

    The output distribution of a deep-layered machine with random logics exhibits a critical network depth, at which it is maximally biased.

  • Three fermion families

    Papers25 May

    Three fermion families

    A colour symmetry extension of baryon plus lepton symmetric gapped quantum topological order replaces families of massive sterile neutrinos.

  • Cognia Junior Fellow

    People18 May

    Cognia Junior Fellow

    Justin Tan is a Cognia Junior Research Fellow at LIMS. His work focuses on string theory, computational geometry and AI-assisted mathematics.

  • Frontiers of AI

    Events18 May

    Frontiers of AI

    Mikhail Burtsev and Yang-Hui He explore advances in AI, from long-context transformers to the impact of machine intelligence on science.

  • People15 May

    New governor

    As well as a LIMS governor, Devon Cross is president of Logos Forums, which runs strategic simulations spanning tech, finance and security.

  • Events14 May

    AI meets string theory

    Andre Lukas shows how machine learning tackles string theory’s vast data, uncovering patterns, exploring its landscape and solving equations.

  • Events13 May

    Meet Neil Turok

    Neil Turok discusses the future of theoretical physics, the impact of AI and how to build and lead institutes for fundamental research.

  • Events13 May

    A simpler cosmology

    Neil Turok presents a minimal paradigm for cosmology that explains the universe’s large-scale structure, dark matter and the Standard Model.

  • Papers5 May

    A new leptogenesis

    We propose that dark matter consists of topological order, so gapped anyon excitations decay to generate the Standard Model's lepton asymmetry.

  • Papers1 May

    An 8-fold way for CRT

    Varying the spacetime dimensions fermions occupy shows charge-conjugation C, space-reflection R and time-reversal T symmetries are 8-fold periodic.

  • Events23 Apr

    Unstable singularities

    Javier Gómez-Serrano shows how machine learning uncovers unstable singularities in fluid dynamics equations, achieving near-maximal accuracy.

  • Papers16 Apr

    Permuting the roots

    The Journal of the European Mathematical Society accepts “Permuting the roots…” by our Fellow Alexander Esterov and his coauthor.

  • Papers9 Apr

    Multi-path transfer

    Simultaneous propagation along multiple paths speeds excitation transfer in long-range lattices, proving an evident quantum advantage.

  • Events9 Apr

    Topological anomalies

    Weicheng Ye presents a framework for anomalies in topological orders and shows how they determine which phases can be physically realised.

  • Events7 Apr

    Continuous gauging

    Matthew Yu introduces a categorical framework for gauging symmetries and constructs Symmetry Topological Field Theories with boundaries.

  • Events7 Apr

    Non-orientable TQFTs

    Ippo Orii surveys topological field theories and discusses the implications of recent progress in extending them to non-orientable manifolds.

  • People6 Apr

    How I work

    Thomas Hodgkinson describes his routine and the tricks and techniques he deploys for getting his writing done and placing it in the press.

  • People6 Apr

    How I work

    Thomas Fink describes the routines, rituals and habits that he has developed for his research and writing and running the London Institute.

  • Events2 Apr

    New maths with AI

    Adam Zsolt Wagner discusses how AI-driven search in language space accelerates mathematical discovery and progress on long-standing problems.

  • Papers20 Mar

    An 8-fold way for CRT

    The journal Physical Review B accepts “C-R-T fractionalisation in the first quantised Hamiltonian theory” by Juven Wang and his coauthors.

  • Events16 Mar

    Entanglement matters

    In a new video, colloquium speaker Frank Verstraete shows how tensor networks harness entanglement to simulate quantum many-body systems.

  • Papers13 Mar

    A new leptogenesis

    The journal Physical Review Research accepts the paper “Topological leptogenesis” by the London Institute’s Ben Delo fellow Juven Wang.

  • Papers10 Mar

    An AI phase change

    Weight pruning uncovers critical behaviour in deep neural networks with a sharp transition from functional cooperation to disordered failure.

  • Events9 Mar

    Formal proofs with AI

    Kevin Buzzard opens AIMS with his views on what a new era of formalised maths, Lean and AI—verified proofs mean for the future of research.

  • Events5 Mar

    Simon and the ATLAS

    In the third Simon Norton Lecture, Robert Curtis will describe Simon’s pivotal contributions to the classic ATLAS of Finite Groups.

  • Press4 Mar

    A home for theory

    A major gift has launched the London Institute’s campaign to build a permanent home for the world’s greatest theorists, says Civil Society.

  • Events4 Mar

    Entanglement matters

    Frank Verstraete shows how tensor networks harness entanglement to simulate strongly correlated quantum matter and reveal hidden symmetries.

  • Press3 Mar

    Gift to science

    Ben Delo has given the London Institute one of the biggest donations ever to a research centre outside Oxford and Cambridge, says The Times.

  • Press3 Mar

    A better way

    In The Spectator, our director Thomas Fink launches our £60m endowment campaign, which aims to change how the world does science.

  • Press3 Mar

    Nobel endeavour

    Times Higher Education reports on Ben Delo’s donation to the London Institute's endowment, to support its mission to revolutionise academia.

  • Press3 Mar

    Pledge of faith

    The entrepreneur Ben Delo has pledged £20m towards the London Institute's £60m endowment campaign, reports the science editor of the FT.

  • Press3 Mar

    Protecting science

    Ben Delo's £20m pledge to the London Institute aims to counter Britain's inconsistent science funding, reports Research Professional News.

  • News3 Mar

    Exceptional Campaign

    Today we launch our Exceptional Campaign, building on a lead gift from Ben Delo to raise a £60m endowment to support our work in perpetuity.

  • Papers2 Mar

    Topological boundary

    We show that Weyl fermions and anomalous topological order in 4 dimensions can live on the edge of the same 5-dimensional superconductor.

  • Events25 Feb

    Learn AI for maths

    The London Institute hosts a 14-week course by Nebius Academy on using AI to explore ideas and generate and test conjectures in mathematics.

  • People24 Feb

    New governor

    As well as a LIMS governor, Aleksei Makin is the founder of Cognia AI, a lab that does research at the interface of GenAI and neuroscience.

  • Papers20 Feb

    Deep learning simplicity

    We give a theory for the output of deep-layered machines and show that, as the network depth increases, it is biased towards simple outputs.

  • People18 Feb

    New governor

    As well as a LIMS governor, Katya Gorbatiouk is a capital markets executive and the Head of Investment Funds at the London Stock Exchange.

  • Events16 Feb

    Quantum energy bounds

    Eleni Kontou explores energy conditions in classical general relativity and QFT, showing how quantum bounds constrain negative energy.

  • Events13 Feb

    Piano and patterns

    The Grynyuk brothers perform piano music for four hands by Brahms and Schubert, with a mathematical interlude by LIMS Fellow Yang-Hui He.

  • Events12 Feb

    Cosmic string duality

    Shu-Heng Shao analyses twist defects in 4d Maxwell theory, deriving their operator spectrum and a chiral sector from classical wave equations.

  • Jobs10 Feb

    Arnold & Landau Fellow

    The London Institute is recruiting a Russian theoretical physicist to join us as an Arnold & Landau Fellow, starting as soon as possible.

  • Events5 Feb

    Phases and phase gates

    Alison Warman explains how Symmetry Topological Field Theory classifies quantum phases and informs advances in quantum information research.

  • Jobs4 Feb

    Cognia Junior Fellows

    The London Institute is hiring two Junior Fellows to work on theoretical aspects of life, learning and emergence, each for three years.

  • Papers29 Jan

    Three-family puzzle

    Extending family symmetry by colour cancels a Standard Model global anomaly, linking three colours to favour three fermion generations.

  • Papers29 Jan

    AI for error correction

    The journal NPJ Artificial Intelligence accepts paper “Machine learning discovers new champion codes” by Yang-Hui He and his coauthors.

  • Events29 Jan

    Functional freedom

    Philosopher James Read explores how ideas of functional freedom shape the renowned mathematician Roger Penrose’s critique of string theory.

  • Papers22 Jan

    Exact hard-rod dynamics

    A canonical quantum fluid model is solved exactly, revealing universal correlation patterns governed by Gaussian random-matrix ensembles.

  • Press6 Jan

    Probing AI’s limits

    Arnold & Landau AI Fellow Mikhail Burtsev is exploring how machine learning models reason. The answer could make tools like ChatGPT smarter.

  • Events5 Jan

    Meet Edward Frenkel

    Edward Frenkel charts his path from Moscow to Berkeley and the quest for a unified theory of maths with the London Institute and its guests.

  • Papers1 Jan

    Higher energies

    Generalising the recent Kelley–Meka result on sets avoiding arithmetic progressions of length three leads to developments in the theory of the higher energies.

  • Papers31 Dec 2025

    Fermionic dark matter

    Gravitational anomalies causing baryon and lepton number violation in the Standard Model are resolved using new fermionic topological orders.

  • People16 Dec 2025

    New governor

    As well as a LIMS governor, Nick Longrich is a palaeontologist and writer, and senior lecturer in evolutionary biology at Bath University.

  • Papers16 Dec 2025

    Standard Model vacuum

    The rich and intricate vacuum geometry of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model—a complex manifold—is characterised for the first time.

  • Papers15 Dec 2025

    AI for error correction

    Machine learning finds “champion” codes by predicting and optimising their minimum Hamming distance, a measure of a code’s robustness.

  • Events15 Dec 2025

    Finite vs continuous

    Pavel Putrov explores surprising connections between 3D topological gauge theories based on finite groups and their continuous counterparts.

  • Events12 Dec 2025

    Meet Edward Frenkel

    Edward Frenkel charts his path from Moscow to Berkeley and the quest for a unified theory of maths with the London Institute and its guests.

  • Events11 Dec 2025

    Permutation group limits

    Colva Roney-Dougal gives new bounds on minimal generating sets in permutation groups and shows what they reveal about product replacement.

  • Events11 Dec 2025

    Feynman’s last wish

    Edward Frenkel illuminates Feynman’s final quest—to learn the Bethe Ansatz—with fresh insights from the geometric Langlands correspondence.