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Mathematica

Mathematica offers an interactive classroom experience that helps students explore and grasp concepts, plus gives faculty the tools to easily create supporting course materials, assignments, and presentations.

Rather than requiring different toolkits for different jobs, Mathematica integrates the world's largest collection of algorithms, high-performance computing capabilities, and a powerful visualization engine in one coherent system, making it ideal for academic research in just about any discipline.

Where to Access Mathematica

Mathematica is currently installed in the following locations:

  • Computer labs - All public and general labs.
  • Computer clusters - The Mathematica license at Loyola allows for grid computing on dedicated research clusters and in ad-hoc, or distributed, grid environments. For more details, please contact Troy Schaudt at troys@wolfram.com.
Download Mathematica

Mathematica can be installed on campus machines, faculty and staff personally-owned machines, and student personally-owned machines. Start here: 

Use your Loyola email address and activate Mathematica using SSO. Sign in with your Loyola login. For more detailed instructions, click on the instructions.

Mathematica Tutorials

The first three tutorials are excellent for new users, and can be assigned to students as homework to learn Mathematica outside of class time.

  • (videos) - Follow along in Mathematica as you watch this multi-part screencast that teaches you the basics—how to create your first notebook, calculations, visualizations, interactive examples, and more.
  • (book) - Learn Mathematica at your own pace from authors with 50+ years of combined Mathematica experience—with hands-on examples, end-of-chapter exercises, and authors' tips that introduce you to the breadth of Mathematica with a focus on ease of use.
  • (online book) - Use this tutorial to learn about solving math problems in the Wolfram Language—from basic arithmetic to integral calculus and beyond.
  •  - Provides a list of new functionality in Mathematica 11, and links to documentation and examples for these new features—including 3D printing, audio processing, machine learning and neural networks, and text and language processing.
  • - Access step-by-step instructions ranging from how to create animations to basic syntax information.
  • - Browse Wolfram's large collection of learning materials and support resources.
Teaching Resources
  • (Free video course) - Learn how to make your classroom dynamic with interactive models, explore computation and visualization capabilities in Mathematica that make it useful for teaching practically any subject at any level, and get best-practice suggestions for course integration.
  • (Video tutorial) - Learn how to create a slideshow for class that shows a mixture of graphics, calculations, and nicely formatted text, with live calculations or animations.
  • - Download pre-built, open-code examples from a daily-growing collection of interactive visualizations, spanning a remarkable range of topics.
  • - Access on-demand and live courses on Mathematica, SystemModeler, and other Wolfram technologies.
Resources for Researchers
  • (Free video course) - Explore Mathematica's high-level and multi-paradigm programming language, support for parallel computing and GPU architectures, built-in functionality for specialized application areas, and multiple publishing and deployment options for sharing your work.
  • (Free video courses) - Explore what's possible with the Wolfram Language, including programming fundamentals and concepts, built-in functions, symbolic expressions, and tips for better, faster coding.
  • (Free video course) - Learn how to create programs that take advantage of multicore machines or available clusters.
  • - Learn what areas of Mathematica are useful for specific fields.