ScholarlyWiki a comprehensive guide to modern quantum physics

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== Stage rules ==
== Search the site ==
 
<div style="border:1px solid #ccd6e0; background:#f8fbff; padding:12px; border-radius:6px; line-height:1.55;">
 
* Use the Quantum Collection internal-link system wherever possible.
* Prefer links to existing <code>Physics:Quantum...</code> pages or section anchors.
* Keep book backlinks clean by using backlink templates, not raw top-of-page backlink text.
* Use yellow right-float image blocks with background <code>#fff8cc</code>.
* For Book IV image filenames, start with the authoritative page number.
* Add new pages to the correct See also data page so the book index stays synchronized.
 
</div>
 
 
== Search the stage ==


<inputbox>
<inputbox>
type=search
type=search
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buttonlabel=Search HandWiki stage
buttonlabel=Search Sitewide
searchbuttonlabel=Search
searchbuttonlabel=Search
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<div class="noexcerpt" style="border:1px solid #ddd; background:#f7f7f7; padding:10px; margin-top:1em; font-size:90%; line-height:1.45;">
<div class="noexcerpt" style="border:1px solid #ddd; background:#f7f7f7; padding:10px; margin-top:1em; font-size:90%; line-height:1.45;">
This is a staging front page. It is intended for review, testing, and controlled development of the Quantum Collection book system.
This is the front page. It is intended for review, testing, and controlled development of the Quantum Collection book system.
</div>
</div>


{{Author|Harold Foppele}}
{{Author|Harold Foppele}}

Revision as of 11:24, 19 May 2026


ScholarlyWiki is a structured platform for scientific knowledge, research notes, and educational collections. It combines encyclopedia-style articles with organized book systems and curated topic indexes. The site is designed for readable explanations, source-based writing, and long-term knowledge building.

Researchers, students, teachers, and independent authors can use it to develop scientific material. Articles can include references, images, formulas, diagrams, categories, and internal cross-links. Book collections make it possible to organize large subjects into chapters, sections, and galleries.

The Quantum Collection is the first major example of this structured book-based approach. It connects foundations, methods, matter, applications, and data analysis in one navigable system. ScholarlyWiki also serves as a staging area where pages can be tested, improved, and reviewed. Curated navigation helps readers move from broad concepts to detailed specialized topics. Rotating featured images highlight scientific ideas and make the front page visually active. The goal is to build a reliable, expandable, and well-organized knowledge platform for science.


Featured from the quantum literature

Image from or related to the featured external quantum article.

Featured external quantum article

Novel ‘Quantum Refrigerator’ Is Great at Erasing Quantum Computer’s Chalkboard

NIST · Quantum science · 2025-01-09

Article preview.
Quantum computers need a "clean" workspace, and a team including scientists at NIST
has found a way to make one.
The article is featured here because it connects current quantum research with a
broader scientific or technological problem.
The preview highlights the main idea while leaving the detailed evidence, figures and
technical discussion to the original source.
Topic area: Quantum science.
Publication or update date: 2025-01-09.
The selected source is NIST; the full article link appears below this preview.
The right-side image is selected from the same article URL when a usable article image
is available.
Readers can follow the source link for the complete article, credits and surrounding
context.

External source: NIST. Selected external quantum article.

Credits: NIST · 2025-01-09

Main books

The parent book for quantum foundations, theory, systems, applications, and frontier topics.

Quantum matter organized from materials and molecules down to atoms, particles, and fields.

Mathematical, experimental, computational, statistical, and field-theory methods.

Book IV: particle-physics data analysis, experiments, reconstruction, statistics, software, and machine learning.


In the particle-physics workshop

A compact look at Book IV: how experiments evolved, how collision data is reconstructed, and where the next detectors may lead.

100%

The workshop
Modern detectors turn invisible events into measurable signals.

100%

A short history
From early scattering studies to large collider experiments.

100%

What comes next
Future experiments need sharper reconstruction and smarter analysis.

Quick navigation

Book pages

Data / See also pages

Galleries

Maintenance


Search the site


System note

This is the front page. It is intended for review, testing, and controlled development of the Quantum Collection book system.


Author: Harold Foppele