Group:MathSpace

From London Hackspace Wiki
MathSpace
When Alternate Fridays, from 18:30
What Talks and workshops on mathematical subjects
Members

The London MathSpace is a group which meets every other Friday to discuss mathematics. We host talks followed by questions and discussion.

If you would like to do a talk, please say so here or on our mailing list.

Next Event - Friday 06 Feb 2015

Our next MathSpace event will be held on Friday the 6th of February from 18:30 onwards in the classroom.

For this event, we are holding a Project Euler problem solving evening.

Project Euler is a website which hosts over 500 problems which require mathematics and programming to solve. We are getting together on Friday to work together on these problems.

If you haven't done much programming before, then these problems are an excellent way to learn to program - we will have MathSpace members on hand to help you work get started.

If you are an accomplished programmer or have worked on Project Euler before, then come along and we can attempt some of the most difficult problems together.

And if you are in the middle, come along and work on some problems in the middle.

As usual, there will also be cake.

Hope to see you all there!

Future events

The talks listed here are provisional and subject to change.

20 Feb 2015

Speaker Topic Brief Outline
Cameron Dobbs (to be finalised) (to be finalised)
Matthew Scroggs Finite Element Methods (to be finalised)
Ruben (to be finalised) (to be finalised)
Axel Wagner Geometric Group Theory (to be finalised)

06 March 2015

Non-talks event.

Past meetings

23 Jan 2015

  • Folding Tube Maps (Matthew Scroggs) - write up
  • AI and Bots in Game Design (Martin Clarke) slides
  • Regime detection in multivariate stochastic processes (Alex Bolton)

09 Jan 2015

  • Voting Theory (Alex Bolton) - slides

05 Dec 2014

  • Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange (Axel Wagner) - slides

21 Nov 2014

24 Oct 2014

Proposed talks

If you would like to do a talk, please add it below or post on our mailing list:


Name Topic Approximate length Other details
Matthew Scroggs How to build a propositional logic robot 20-30 mins How I built @mathslogicbot and some of the maths behind it.