Nature speaks mathematics.
An interactive journey from the intuition behind natural phenomena to the partial differential equations that describe them — with hands-on simulations you can explore.
Start reading →Chapters
Nature & Math
What does it mean to model nature? Digital twins, surrogate models, and the art of choosing what to ignore.
02Nature's Patterns
Zebra stripes, slime mold networks, phantom traffic jams, soap bubbles — striking phenomena that demand equations.
03Building Intuition
What do $\frac{\partial u}{\partial t}$ and $\nabla^2 u$ actually mean physically? The gap no textbook fills.
Fourier's Story
How Fourier tried to solve the heat equation and accidentally discovered one of the most powerful tools in mathematics.
coming soonHeat & Diffusion
Derive $\frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = \alpha \nabla^2 u$ from energy balance. Add advection. See how information spreads.
coming soonThe Wave Equation
$u_{tt} = c^2 u_{xx}$: information travels at finite speed. Reflections, interference, the physics of sound and light.
coming soonReaction-Diffusion
Two chemicals, local rules, global patterns. Why Turing's 1952 paper predicted zebra stripes decades before experiments confirmed it.
coming soonConservation Laws
The equation behind phantom traffic jams. Shock waves, the Rankine–Hugoniot condition, and why traffic science is applied mathematics.
coming soonPDE Classification
The discriminant $B^2 - 4AC$ and what it tells you about how information propagates through a physical system.
coming soonElliptic PDEs
Why soap bubbles are round. Plateau's problem, the Laplace equation, and the mathematics of minimal surfaces.
coming soon