Dear Thomas Woolley,
Congratulations!
It is our pleasure to inform you that you have been nominated for Most Outstanding Learning Experience in the Enriching Student Life Awards 2026!
Lovely email to get on a Monday morning
"Dear Thomas Woolley,
Congratulations!
It is our pleasure to inform you that you have been nominated for Most Outstanding Learning Experience in the Enriching Student Life Awards 2026!"
We don't do it for the awards, but nominations are nice.
02.03.2026 11:42
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A range of Turing patterns on different domains.
So, why does it matter?
Explicitly, I've shown that we have to be careful when approximating geometries in applications. Curved edges can fundamentally alter what it means for a domain to be 1D, or 2D.
#TuringPatterns #MathBio #AppliedMaths #PatternFormation @springernature.com
26.02.2026 14:20
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Illustrating patterning bifurcation points. The square point represents the solution for the 1D line. The diamonds points represent ellipses and the circle point represents the solution for the circle domain. As you can see, the ellipses don't connect the square and circle points.
Although the patterns on ellipses do tend to circle-like behaviour they don't tend to act like lines as the ellipses become thinner.
To explain this I had to use Mathieu equations, which first appeared in 1868!
Mathematics: once true, always true.
26.02.2026 14:20
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An elliptical coordinate system linking the flat line and the circle.
Due to their simplicity, rectangular and circular domains are often used to represent reality as they make the mathematics easier to work with. I assumed I could use an elliptical domain to interpolate between the circle and the thin rectangle.
How wrong I was.
26.02.2026 14:20
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A Turing simulation on a circle, rectangle, and ellipse domain (top to bottom). As the domains grow, left to right, patterns appear on the domains at different points.
π New paper out! π₯³
rdcu.be/e5A3P
Turing patterns are a wonderful mathematical framework for generating natureβs pattern. I thought I understood them. But they can still lead to surprises!
26.02.2026 14:20
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Beautiful Christmath trees by Daniel Mentrard.
www.geogebra.org/m/fgdr5ama
11.12.2025 09:43
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S3 Ep1: SMB 2025
Podcast Episode Β· Biology in Numbers Β· 09/29/2025 Β· 53m
And listen to the whole podcast here!
Many greats in this podcast with far better answers, like @adamlmaclean.bsky.social, @amyhurford.bsky.social, @gosiaweh.bsky.social, @thomasewoolley.bsky.social !
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/b...
01.10.2025 22:04
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Woohoo! @smbmathbiology.bsky.social #SMB2025
17.07.2025 23:45
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BBC Radio 4 - The Infinite Monkey Cage, Series 32, Nature's Shapes - Dave Gorman, Sarah Hart and Thomas Woolley
Brian Cox and Robin Ince reveal the hidden codes behind the shapes we see in nature
#TheInfiniteMonkeyCage
Nature's Shapes - @davegorman.bsky.social, @sarah-hart.bsky.social and @thomasewoolley.bsky.social
Today 11:00
BBC Radio 4
@profbriancox.bsky.social and @robinince.bsky.social reveal the hidden codes behind the shapes we see in nature
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...
27.03.2025 08:33
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The Infinite Monkey Cage - Series 32 - Nature's Shapes - Dave Gorman, Sarah Hart and Thomas Woolley - BBC Sounds
Brian Cox and Robin Ince reveal the hidden codes behind the shapes we see in nature.
The most interesting of episodes of The Infinite Monkey Cage for someone who, like me, is fascinated by
#Physics
#Nature
#Mathematics
#Comedy
Nature's Shapes π
www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
HT @bbcsounds.bsky.social @davegorman.bsky.social @profbriancox.bsky.social @thomasewoolley.bsky.social
06.04.2025 09:02
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