• #73 Building digital hearts
    Nov 24 2025

    Send us a text

    Imagine if your doctor had a digital model of your heart, personalised to you and updated with your latest medical information. This isn't science fiction – this revolutionary healthcare is being tested now. In this podcast we speak to Steven Niederer, who leads the CVDNet project developing and testing these ideas, and his colleague Richard Wilkinson, from the University of Nottingham.

    Richard is one of the organisers of the long research programme, Representing, calibrating & leveraging prediction uncertainty from statistics to machine learning (RCL), held earlier this year at the Isaac Newton Institute for the Mathematical Sciences (INI).

    We first spoke to Steven back in 2019 when he helped organise the Fickle Heart programme at the INI. In this podcast, Richard and Steven tell us about digital twins, digital hearts, and how the RCL programme and CVDNet build on the work started back in 2019 with the Fickle Heart programme.

    You can find out more about some of the ideas discussed in this podcast in these short introductions:

    • Maths in a Minute: Mathematical models
    • Maths in a Minute: Differential equations
    • Maths in Minute: Machine learning
    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • #72 Living Proof: Céline Broeckaert and Frank Verstraete
    Nov 12 2025

    Send us a text

    In this episode of Living Proof, we speak with Céline and Frank about their book: Why nobody understands quantum physics - and everyone needs to know something about it. They share insights into their writing journey and how each of their backgrounds contributed to the final project.

    We met Céline and Frank at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge, where Frank is co-organising the research programme Quantum field theory with boundaries, impurities, and defects.

    "I have learnt that even if you are not a master in mathematics and science you are still able to grasp the essence."

    This is Céline Broeckaert talking, believe it or not, about the famously difficult theory of quantum mechanics. Céline knows what she's talking about. She's not a physicist, in fact she's a Romance languages scholar, author and playwright. Yet she's written a book about quantum mechanics together with her physicist husband Frank Verstraete, Leigh Trapnell Professor of Quantum Physics at the University of Cambridge. The book is called Why nobody understands quantum physics - and everyone needs to know something about it. And it's good timing: quantum mechanics celebrates its 100th birthday this year.

    See here for an article Plus Magazine published previously about Frank's work.

    For a brief introduction to quantum mechanics see A ridiculously short introduction to some very basic quantum mechanics. To find out more about the overlap of maths and art, see here.

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
  • #71 Moustapha Fall
    Oct 22 2025

    Send us a text

    In this episode of the Living Proof podcast we're delighted to meet Moustapha Fall. Moustapha is the Center President of the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) in Senegal and winner of a prestigious Ramanujan Prize for Young Mathematicians from Developing Countries. He also plays an important role on the international stage as Member-at-Large of the Executive Committee of the International Mathematical Union.

    Moustapha talks to us about about the amazing institution that is AIMS, about his outreach activities and advice for budding mathematicians, and about the challenges that face mathematicians in sub-Saharan Africa.

    You can find the IMU-ICIAM report on fraudulent publishing, which Moustapha mentions in the podcast, here. The same team of authors has also drawn up recommendations on how to fight fraudulent publishing.

    We met Moustapha when he visited the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • #70 Codina Cotar and some amazing mathematical art
    Oct 15 2025

    Send us a text

    Earlier this year the the anomalous mathematical patterns sci-art competition attracted some jaw-dropping entries. The competition was held in connection to the Stochastic systems for anomalous diffusion research programme which took place at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences (INI) in Cambridge last year.

    In this episode of Living Proof, we talk to Codina Cotar, who co-organised the INI programme and helped put on the competition. Codina explains the maths which served as inspiration and discusses some of the winning entries. From coffee to quantum mechanics and from dance to diffusion, find out how mathematics, nature and art are inextricably linked.

    Note that the in-person exhibition at the INI is now scheduled for March 2026.

    The entries discusses in this podcast are shown below. To find out more about some of the mathematical topics mentioned in this podcast see:

    • The Sci-art competition - This article explores some of the mathematics behind the competition, including randomness, diffusion, and many particle systems.
    • The Fields Medals 2022: Maryna Viazovska - This article looks at the mathematics of sphere packings, which won a Fields Medal for the mathematician Maryna Viazovska.
    • Maths in a Minute: Fluid dynamics - A very bried introduction to the mathematics of liquids and gases.
    • A ridiculously short introduction to some very basic quantum mechanics - This article does what the title suggests.
    • A brief history of quantum field theory - A deeper look at the theory that arose from quantum mechanics.
    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • #69 Ekaterina Eremenko on Olga Ladyzhenskaya’s Life in Math
    Jul 9 2025

    Send us a text

    In this episode of Living Proof, we speak with renowned filmmaker Ekaterina Eremenko about her film "Portrait of Olga Ladyzhenskaya", which tells the story of the legendary Russian mathematician celebrated for her groundbreaking work in partial differential equations and fluid dynamics. Ekaterina shares what inspired her to bring Ladyzhenskaya’s life to the screen, explores the creative process behind the film, and reflects on the powerful intersection of art and science.

    The film was screened at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences to celebrate International Women in Mathematics Day 2025.

    Show More Show Less
    17 mins
  • #67 The meaning is in the arrows with Adina Goldberg
    Jun 11 2025

    Send us a text

    Welcome to the latest episode of Living Proof, our podcast produced in collaboration with Plus.maths.org

    In this podcast we hope to give you some interesting information. This information is encoded in terms of 0s and 1s – the classical bits in your computer or phone. But what if instead we were using a quantum computer? Then we'd be dealing with quantum bits, or qubits, opening up exciting new possibilities. And quantum information theory is the area of mathematics that explores how we can do that.

    Adina Goldberg was one of the participants at a recent research programme in this area at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences. In this episode we speak to Adina about her work and how her intriguing motto – "the meaning is in the arrows" – applies to her research, her career path, and the way she looks at life.

    You can find out more about quantum information in this short introduction and delve into the details of information theory in this collection of content.

    Make sure you visit

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • #66 A conversation with Sarah Hart
    Apr 23 2025

    Send us a text

    Welcome to the latest episode of Living Proof, our podcast produced in collaboration with Plus.maths.org

    In this episode we spoke to Sarah Hart, a mathematician interested in not just the maths itself, but also its connections to other areas of literature and art. She's done an amazing number of things throughout her career — from research in pure mathematics and heading up a maths department, to being the first woman Gresham Professor of Geometry and President of the British Society for the History of Mathematics.

    Sarah has also written a fascinating book, called Once upon a time: The wondrous connections between mathematics and literature, and she gave a talk at this year's Cambridge Festival, with the intriguing title Life in Lilliput – The Mathematics of Fictional Realms that was held at the INI. Sarah also participates in the Modern History of Mathematics research programme that is currently taking place at the INI.

    In this episode, Sarah tells us many things she has done and how they all fit together, and gives some advice for budding mathematicians of all ages: "keep pursuing all the things you love doing, and one day it may turn out that they all fit together."

    To find out more about some of the things mentioned in this podcast see the following links:

    • Sarah Hart: Once upon a prime — In this episode of Maths on the Move podcast Sarah talks about her book and the connections between maths and literature.
    • Maths in three minutes: Groups — This article gives a brief introduction to Sarah's research area.
    • Life in Lilliput – The Mathematics of Fictional Realms — Click this link to watch a recording of Sarah's Cambridge Festival talk at the INI.
    Show More Show Less
    25 mins