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  • Arnold & Landau
  • Cognia AI Junior Fellows

    Jobs16 Jul

    Cognia AI Junior Fellows

    The London Institute is hiring two Junior Fellows in theoretical physics and mathematics to join us in our quarters at the Royal Institution.

  • Langlands unlocked

    Press16 Jul

    Langlands unlocked

    The geometric Langlands proof brings mathematicians a step closer to a grand unified theory, Ananyo Bhattacharya writes in a Nature feature.

  • Enumerative Galois

    Eventscoming 23 jul

    Enumerative Galois

    Prof. Frank Sottile of Texas A&M outlines the history and the state of the art of a keystone topic at the interface of algebra and geometry.

  • Symmetry day

    Events14 Jul

    Symmetry day

    Three leading experts show how the idea of symmetry forms key interfaces between algebra and geometry through the lens of their recent work.

  • Non-reciprocal breather

    Papers10 Jul

    Non-reciprocal breather

    The Journal Physical Review X accepts the paper “Non-reciprocal breathing solitons” by our Arnold Fellow Oleksandr Gamayun and coauthors.

  • Events7 Jul

    Decoding life with AI

    Mikhail Burtsev explains how artificial intelligence is helping to decipher genomes in the Royal Institution’s iconic lecture theatre.

  • Papers6 Jul

    Fibonacci anyons

    With IBM Quantum, we braid non-abelian Fibonacci anyons in string-net condensates to realise fault-tolerant universal quantum computation.

  • Papers3 Jul

    On universal dynamics

    The Journal of High Energy Physics accepts “Exactly solvable models for universal operator growth” by Oleksandr Gamayun and coauthors.

  • Events3 Jul

    Discriminants & physics

    Ed Segal from UCL will talk about semi-orthogonal decompositions of derived categories of toric varieties, coming from wall-crossing in GIT.

  • Papers2 Jul

    Optimal transfer

    We use the quantum brachistochrone method to design an optimal control strategy for the fastest quantum state transfer in long qubit chains.

  • People1 Jul

    Khodorkovsky Fellow

    Dr Kurnosov is a Khodorkovsky Research Fellow at LIMS. His work focuses on complex geometry, hyperkähler geometry and Calabi-Yau manifolds.

  • Papers26 Jun

    Analysing the vacuum

    Birational methods in algebraic geometry are used to explicitly describe the vacuum structure of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model.

  • Events24 Jun

    Caltech in London

    Caltech alumni gather at the London Institute to catch up on Caltech news and hear a discussion on how Britain can help American science.

  • Papers16 Jun

    Standard Model vacuum

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

  • Events16 Jun

    The mortality equation

    Thomas Fink unveils a mathematical model showing programmed aging cannot be favoured by natural selection, even in a shifting environment.

  • Press11 Jun

    A Fields Medal for AI?

    The Financial Times features Prof. Yang-Hui He in a piece highlighting the potential impact of future AI models on academic mathematicians.

  • Papers10 Jun

    Optimal transfer

    Physical Review Letters accepts the paper “Time-optimal transfer of the quantum state in long qubit arrays” by Andrei Stepanenko and coauthors.

  • Papers10 Jun

    Reinforcing spectra

    We show reinforcement learning can be used to check whether a certain class of quantum field theory has a finite spectrum of stable particles.

  • Press8 Jun

    Rebel with a cause

    Ben Delo talks to Thomas W. Hodgkinson about overcoming Asperger’s, smoking the competition, and why he likes the London Institute.

  • Press7 Jun

    The most valuable cargo

    As US science funding falters, Britain creating posts for top American researchers would be a win for science on both sides of the Atlantic.

  • Press6 Jun

    Outsmarting AI

    Prof. Yang-Hui He speaks to Scientific American about joining top mathematicians for a secret meeting to pose problems even AI can’t solve.

  • Events3 Jun

    The mathematical piper

    Martin Reeves explores the surprising harmony between the music and maths of the Great Highland bagpipe—complete with a live demonstration.

  • Events29 May

    AI for discovery

    Prof. Michael Douglas examines how advances in AI may soon lead to autonomous systems capable of making genuine mathematical discoveries.

  • Papers28 May

    Reflexions on Mahler

    Using Newton polynomials from reflexive polygons, we find that the Mahler measure and dessin d’enfants are in one-to-one correspondence.

  • Papers22 May

    Fredholm meets Toeplitz

    A new approach to the large distance asymptotic of the finite-temperature deformation is discussed for a sine-kernel Fredholm determinant.

  • Press21 May

    Talking murmurations

    Prof. Yang-Hui He discusses AI breakthroughs in mathematics with podcaster Curt Jaimungal–including his work on the murmuration conjecture.

  • Press16 May

    The shape of physics

    Prof. Yang-Hui He discusses geometry’s surprising impact on physics and their interplay through the ages on Quanta’s The Joy of Why podcast.

  • Events15 May

    Early universe strings

    Prof. Joseph Conlon outlines how string theory suggests new equations of state that may describe the physics of the very early universe.

  • Events9 May

    Conformal to topological

    Dr Matthew Buican details how a universal deformation takes 3d N=4 superconformal field theories to 3d topological quantum field theories.

  • Website8 May

    Soft power revised

    We have simplified our soft power page, which now comprises voice, website, building, meetings, recruitment and organisational intelligence.

  • Papers6 May

    Fibonacci anyons

    Nature Communications accepts the paper “Realizing string-net condensation: Fibonacci anyon braiding for universal...” by Juven Wang et al.

  • Events6 May

    Geometry meets physics

    Simon Telen presents his discovery of a new connection between polynomials inspired by particle physics and classical algebraic geometry.

  • Website6 May

    Horizontal scrolling

    We’ve added horizontal scrolling to our website, providing a cleaner way to visualise and navigate evolvable scripts, such as our rituals.

  • Papers2 May

    Reinforcing spectra

    The Journal Physics Letters B accepts the paper “BPS spectroscopy with reinforcement learning” by our Fellow Yang-Hui He and coauthors.

  • Papers30 Apr

    Fredholm meets Toeplitz

    Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena accepts the paper “On finite-temperature Fredholm determinants” by Oleksandr Gamayun and coauthor.

  • Events29 Apr

    Linearising groups

    Antoine Pinardin presents a complete description of the linearisable subgroups of the plane Cremona group over the field of complex numbers.

  • Press28 Apr

    Liking the like?

    In The Times, our writer Thomas W. Hodgkinson reviews a compelling history of the “like” button, co-written by our Trustee Martin Reeves.

  • People28 Apr

    New Trustee

    Florian Schuster is a LIMS Trustee. An investor and entrepreneur, he advises on financial strategy, promotes our values and raises funding.

  • Papers16 Apr

    On universal dynamics

    Quantum many-body systems share patterns of dynamics that are exactly described by tridiagonal matrices based on continuous Hahn polynomials.

  • Papers11 Apr

    Fibonacci anyons

    With IBM Quantum, we braid non-abelian Fibonacci anyons in string-net condensates to realise fault-tolerant universal quantum computation.

  • Papers7 Apr

    Learning integrability

    We introduce an AI-based framework for finding solutions to the Yang-Baxter equation and discover hundreds of new integrable Hamiltonians.

  • Events7 Apr

    Quantum symmetries

    Dr Po-Shen Hsin introduces generalised symmetries in quantum systems and explores their roles in dynamics, constraints and applications.

  • People3 Apr

    Ben Delo Fellow

    Juven Wang is the Ben Delo Fellow at LIMS. Previously a Fellow, he took up the prestigious new post that was created by a gift from Ben Delo.

  • Press3 Apr

    My passion for maths

    In a time of government cuts to mathematics, the entrepreneur and philanthropist Ben Delo explains why he’s funding a new Fellowship at LIMS.

  • Papers3 Apr

    Circuits with memory

    We derive dynamical equations for networks with memristors and the Lyapunov functions of purely memristive circuits to study their stability.

  • Papers2 Apr

    Reinforcing spectra

    We show reinforcement learning can be used to check whether a certain class of quantum field theory has a finite spectrum of stable particles.

  • Events28 Mar

    London learns Lean

    Mathematicians across London share their work on the formalisation of mathematics using the AI proof-assistant computer language Lean.

  • Events27 Mar

    Groupoids do the twist

    Prof. Konstantinos Zoubos will use Lie groupoids and their twists to uncover hidden symmetries of supersymmetric orbifold field theories.

  • Events27 Mar

    AI for QFT

    In two consecutive talks, Prof. Koji Hashimoto and Dr Akio Tomiya discuss applying machine learning to problems in quantum field theory.

  • Events26 Mar

    Co-piloting proofs

    Dr Bhavik Mehta from Imperial College London gives an overview of Lean, the proof-assistant computer language used to formalize mathematics.

  • Papers24 Mar

    Irreducible group action

    The Journal of Lie Theory accepts “Irreducible actions of the infinite-dimensional general linear group on...” by Oleksandr Kosyak and coauthor.

  • Papers15 Mar

    Quadratic residues

    Additive combinatorics sheds light on the distribution of the set of squares in the prime field, revealing a new upper bound for the number of gaps.

  • Papers5 Mar

    Metaheuristic tilings

    We use simulated annealing to efficiently construct all brane tilings that encode supersymmetric gauge theories and discover a new one.

  • Events5 Mar

    Fermionic TQFTs

    Dr Matthew Yu explains how fermionic topological quantum field theories can be given a categorical description in 3+1-dimensional spacetime.

  • Events3 Mar

    QCD’s IR and UV limits

    Dr Andrea Guerrieri explores QCD in two distinct regimes to illustrate its pivotal role in shaping our understanding of fundamental physics.

  • People1 Mar

    LIMS Fellow

    Evgeny Sobko is a Fellow at LIMS. Previously a Landau Fellow, he took up the new post after a global competition for our new Fellowship.

  • Papers28 Feb

    Three-qubit shortcut

    We achieve maximal-fidelity state transfer in the fastest possible time for a 3-qubit chain by applying the quantum variational method.

  • Papers28 Feb

    Topological dark matter

    Sterile neutrinos are replaced by topological order as dark matter candidates to counterbalance the Standard Model’s gravitational anomalies.

  • Papers27 Feb

    Learning 3-manifolds

    3-manifolds represented as isomorphism signatures of their triangulations and associated Pachner graphs are analysed with machine learning.

  • Papers26 Feb

    Metaheuristic tilings

    The Journal Physics Letters B accepts the paper titled “Metaheuristic generation of brane tilings” by our Fellow Yang-Hui He and coauthors.