エピソード

  • June Huh I The Poet Who Cracked 50-Year-Old Mystery with… Shapes
    2025/06/04

    June Huh wasn’t a math prodigy. He was a high school dropout who wanted to be a poet. But instead of writing verses, he found beauty in numbers—and ended up solving some of the hardest math problems in history. Huh cracked a 50-year-old puzzle in combinatorics, the math of patterns, arrangements, and hidden structures. His discoveries connect math to everything from AI to internet search engines, changing how we optimize systems and process information.
    This episode explores how an outsider rewrote the rules of mathematics, proving that you don’t have to be a child genius to change the world. If you’ve ever struggled with math, this story might just make you see it in a whole new way.

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    11 分
  • Happy Ending Problem: Maths Puzzle That led to a Wedding
    2025/05/28

    What if geometry could guarantee a perfect shape—no matter how random your mess? Welcome to the world of the Happy Ending Problem, a mind-bending puzzle in combinatorial geometry that starts with just a handful of dots… and ends with a nearly century-old mystery still unsolved.
    In this short documentary, we explore a charming-sounding problem with serious mathematical bite. Originally sparked by a group of Hungarian mathematicians in the 1930s—and rumored to have sparked a romance too—it asks: how many randomly placed points does it take to guarantee a convex polygon of a given size? We know the answer for small cases. But for larger shapes? It's still an open question.
    We unravel why this simple-sounding puzzle hides deep complexity. From the ideas of Ramsey theory to breakthroughs in computational geometry, you'll hear how mathematicians—armed with clever algorithms and bold theory—keep pushing toward an answer.
    At its heart, this is a story about inevitability: that in chaos, patterns will always emerge. Whether you're a math lover or just here for the beautiful strangeness of it all, you’ll find yourself hooked on the puzzle that promises a happy ending… but won’t tell us when.

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    11 分
  • Maryna Viazovska I Fields Medal Winner who cracked 400 year old Puzzle
    2025/05/21

    Ever wondered what stacking oranges has to do with data encryption? Turns out, everything.For over 400 years, mathematicians struggled to prove the best way to pack spheres in space. Even Isaac Newton had theories but no proof. Then, Maryna Viazovska cracked the code—solving one of math’s oldest mysteries in just a few elegant pages.
    Her breakthrough wasn’t just about stacking fruit—it has massive real-world impact. Her discoveries are revolutionizing data compression, improving security in cryptography, and even offering insights into quantum physics.
    This episode explores the genius behind her work, the mathematical beauty of high-dimensional spaces, and why her Fields Medal win was a historic moment. Get ready for a mind-bending journey into a problem so simple it fooled mathematicians for centuries—until Viazovska solved it.

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    13 分
  • The Berry–Tabor Conjecture: When Classical Order Turns Quantum Weird
    2025/05/14

    Step into the strange and electrifying world where chaos meets quantum mechanics. The Quantum Maze unpacks the Berry–Tabor Conjecture—a decades-old mystery that suggests the universe’s most “predictable” systems might secretly follow rules of pure randomness. Sound impossible? That’s exactly why scientists are still obsessed with it.
    Through immersive storytelling, this audio documentary explores the eerie parallels between classical order and quantum unpredictability. We trace how tidy, integrable systems—like a billiard ball rolling endlessly on a smooth table—might spawn quantum energy levels that behave like a cosmic game of chance. Along the way, you’ll uncover why degeneracies, symmetries, and tiny arithmetic quirks make or break the theory.
    From the origins of chaos theory to real-world experiments with microwave billiards and quantum dots, we piece together the puzzle using expert insight, sharp metaphors, and big questions. What happens when random isn’t truly random? And what does it mean when order disguises chaos?
    If you’ve ever wondered whether the universe is a well-oiled machine—or a glitchy simulation—this series is your backstage pass to the science of unpredictability.

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    12 分
  • Hugo Duminil-Copin I Fields Medal 2022 Winner who tames Chaos
    2025/05/07

    What do melting ice, wildfires, and pandemics have in common? They all follow hidden mathematical rules—rules that one man uncovered.Meet Hugo Duminil-Copin, the mathematician who cracked the code of randomness and phase transitions. His discoveries explain how tiny shifts cause massive changes—like water turning to ice or a single spark igniting a forest fire.
    His work isn’t just theoretical—it’s transforming how we predict disease outbreaks, design materials, and even understand financial crashes. From magnets to markets, his math reveals the tipping points that shape our world.
    Join us as we dive into the work of Hugo Duminil-Copin and explore how his breakthroughs help us navigate an unpredictable world. If you thought math was just about equations, think again—this is the science of chaos itself

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    11 分
  • Poincaré Conjecture: The only Millennium Prize Problems solved so far
    2025/03/26

    In the final episode, we explore the Poincaré Conjecture—the only Millennium Prize Problem that has been solved so far.


    At its core, the conjecture asks a deceptively simple question: how can we tell if a shape in three-dimensional space is essentially a stretched-out version of a sphere? Though it sounds simple, this problem sits at the heart of topology, the study of shapes and spaces, and has profound implications for understanding the very structure of the universe.


    After stumping mathematicians for over a century, it was finally cracked in 2003 by the enigmatic Grigori Perelman, who rejected both the million-dollar prize and global fame. Join us as we unravel the beauty of this groundbreaking solution and the fascinating story of the man who solved it.

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    14 分
  • P vs NP : The most important unsolved problem in Computer Science
    2025/03/20

    In this episode, we dive into P=NP, the most important unsolved problem in computer science—a question so profound it could reshape technology as we know it. At its core, P=NP asks: can problems that are easy to check also be easy to solve? From cracking encryption to solving puzzles that would normally take centuries of computation, a solution to P=NP could unlock unimaginable computational power—or chaos.


    The implications are staggering: a proof could revolutionize medicine, transportation, and artificial intelligence, or render our digital security obsolete overnight. It’s a problem that has baffled and captivated computer scientists for decades.


    Join us as we break down the mystery, explore its real-world stakes, and imagine a world where P=NP is finally solved.

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    19 分
  • Hodge Conjecture: The Grand Puzzle of Shapes, Spaces, and Higher Dimensions
    2025/03/12

    In this episode, we tackle the Hodge Conjecture—a grand mathematical puzzle that dares to explain the hidden structure of shapes, spaces, and higher dimensions. At its heart, the Hodge Conjecture is about understanding how complicated geometric shapes can be broken into simpler, more fundamental building blocks.


    Solving this problem could illuminate the very fabric of geometry, with profound implications for fields like string theory, topology, and theoretical physics. It’s a mystery so deep that it has challenged some of the greatest mathematical minds.


    Join us as we unravel this enigma and explore the beauty and complexity of dimensions far beyond our own.


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    16 分