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Last year, Graham Woan knew just how he wanted to spend his Christmas break: trying to solve the 2,200-year-old mystery of the oldest known "computer" in the world. Known as the Antikythera ...
who was looking to make a replica of the calendar ring and was investigating ways to determine just how many holes it contained,” Graham Woan, a professor in the School of Physics & Astronomy ...
led by Glasgow astrophysics professor Graham Woan, came from Bayesian statistics. This "uses probability to quantify uncertainty based on incomplete data," the statement said. The other portion ...
Now, in a new study published in the Oficial Journal of the British Horological Institute, University of Glasgow gravitational wave researcher Graham Woan and research associate Joseph Bayley ...
Graham Woan, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Glasgow, and Joseph Bayley, a research associate there, said that the mechanism’s calendar ring, a circular feature that survived ...
In a study published this month in the Horological Journal, co-authors Graham Woan and Joseph Bayley offer a new interpretation of the mechanism’s calendar ring, a piece of the device that once ...
Although the Antikythera Mechanism is a well-known archaeological wonder, the inspiration for this research by Graham Woan and Joseph Bayley came from an unlikely source. A YouTuber named Chris ...
In a new research paper published in 2024, Graham Woan and his colleagues from the University of Glasgow used statistical methods developed for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave ...
It's also only the first step. Professor Graham Woan, one of the international team of scientists who worked on the breakthrough, told Sky News it was similar to Galileo looking through the ...
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