AI NewsChatGPT can now create interactive visuals to help you understand math and science concepts

ChatGPT can now create interactive visuals to help you understand math and science concepts

12:56 AM IST · March 11, 2026

ChatGPT can now create interactive visuals to help you understand math and science concepts

On Tuesday, OpenAIintroduceddynamic visual explanations, a new ChatGPT feature that allows users to see how formulas, variables, and mathematical relationships change in real time. Instead of just reading an explanation or looking at a static diagram, users can now interact directly with interactive visuals. For example, when exploring the Pythagorean theorem, you can adjust the lengths of the triangle’s sides and instantly watch the hypotenuse update. Users can adjust numbers and variables and see changes reflected immediately. To try out the feature, ask ChatGPT questions like “What is a lens equation?” or “How can I find the area of a circle?” ChatGPT will respond not only with an explanation but also with an interactive module you can manipulate. Currently, these visuals are available for over 70 math and science topics, including the binomial square, Charles’ law, area of a circle, compound interest, Coulomb’s law, difference of squares, exponential decay, Hooke’s law, kinetic energy, linear equations, and Ohm’s law. OpenAI plans to expand the feature later on to include more interactive topics. It’s available to all logged-in ChatGPT users. The launch of dynamic visual explanations is notable in that it shifts the tool’s role somewhat — rather than just delivering answers, it asks users to engage with the underlying concepts directly. Whether that translates to deeper understanding will likely depend on how it’s used. As AI continues to transform the way people approach learning, it has sparked heated debates in the education community. Though some educators worry about overreliance on AI, many teachers and students have already embraced these tools, integrating them into daily study routines. According to OpenAI, more than 140 million people use ChatGPT each week for help with math and science, subjects that have traditionally challenged learners. Other major AI companies are also exploring similar interactive features. In November,Google’s Geminilaunched its own interactive diagrams and visuals. This new feature joins other recent ChatGPT educational tools, such asstudy mode, which guides users through problems step by step. There’s also QuizGPT, where users can make flashcards and ask ChatGPT to quiz them on any topic before exams.

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