In This Issue

Invasion waves arise in many systems, including wound healing and brain tumor expansion.

What do climate, black holes, and vorticity have in common? They are all related through oceanic eddies.

David Stifler Johnson, a leader in theoretical computer science, passed away on March 8, 2016, at age 70.

Car-sharing variability made it a perfect topic for the eleventh annual Moody's Mega Math (M3) Challenge.

The last installment of our intro to the SIAGA journal explores Bézier curves, the Rubik’s Cube, and a Kummer surface.

The Moody's Mega Math Workshop helped students connect math to real-world issues.

James Case reviews Robert Calinger's Leonhard Euler: Mathematical Genius in the Enlightenment.

In 1998, Stephen Smale published a list of 18 challenge problems for the 21st century.

Cutting-edge scientific computing has relied for decades on what seems to be a never-ending parade of faster and faster computers.

Imagining objects with negative mass may seem like a scholastic exercise, but we're able to interpret some real physical phenomena.

The Emory University Chapter of SIAM hosted “Math & Industry: Happily Ever After” this March.

Methods used to construct networks and the resulting bias and incompleteness draw limited attention.