| Baez, John | | University of California Riverside. Research interests: quantum gravity and n-categories. Regular column on "This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics". |
| Borresen, Jon | | University of Exeter. Recent work on coupled systems and theoretical neuroscience. Publications and preprints. |
| Charles Hermite | | Includes a biography comparing him with other contemporaries of his, references and quotations. |
| Charles-Francois Sturm | | A biography of the Mathematican who worked on differential equations and created the form now call Sturm-Liouville equations. |
| David Feinstein | | Applications of mathematics to physics problems drawn from a career in industry. |
| Delius, Gustav W. | | University of York. Quantum field theory and mathematical physics, particularly interested in Integrable Quantum Field Theories with a Boundary. Publications, talks, teaching material, meetings. |
| Elie Cartan | | A brief biography of Cartan and exposition of his work in applied topology. |
| Elie Cartan | | Includes a brief biography and a reference list. |
| George Green | | A biography including quotations from his writings and contemporary articles. |
| George Green 1793-1841 | | Inventor of Green's functions. Biography, papers, bibliographical references, archival material at University of Nottingham, |
| George Stokes | | A short biography on the mathematician who created Stokes's theorem |
| Greg Moore | | Rutgers University. Research on string theory and M-theory, with a particular emphasis on the underlying mathematical structures and applications to and from modern mathematics. |
| Gustav Jacobi | | The mathematician whose work with coordinate transformations is still common in mathematical physics |
| Hermann Hankel | | The mathematician who developed Hankel functions and the Hankel transform. |
| Jean Delambre | | The mathematician who analysed the orbit of Uranus and predicted a possible extra planet. |
| Jean Fourier | | A short biography on the man who invented the Fourier series and transforms. |
| John F. Shalman | | Professor of Theoretical Physics in the New Delhi Institute of Technology. He is interested in a new concept of space-time in physics: his preferred approach is Bumpter Theory. | |
|