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  Help promote Physics Overflow

+ 5 like - 0 dislike
53416 views

After a succesful private , PhysicsOverflow is finally public!

Welcome to PhysicsOverflow public $\beta$ !

PhysicsOverflow is an open platform for community peer review and graduate-level Physics discussion.

The purpose of the public beta is mainly to do with the reviews section - the number of reviews is still very small, and submission re-categorisation is still underway. Local hosting of submissions will also be eventually achieved.

It is to be noted that the current distribution of topics reflects the current user expertise, rather than the ultimately intended figures.

Despite the word "beta" used for this phase, PhysicsOverflow will not shut itself down for low traffic figures.  

Useful links:  

asked Apr 3, 2014 in Public Official Posts by dimension10 (1,985 points) [ revision history ]
edited Jan 30, 2018 by Arnold Neumaier

3 Answers

+ 3 like - 0 dislike

Help promote Physics Overflow  

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answered Apr 3, 2014 by dimension10 (1,985 points) [ revision history ]
edited Mar 6, 2019 by Dilaton
Most voted comments show all comments

I just added a link at the top of my home page, and of my Theoretical Physics FAQ.

I have added a link to PhysicsOverflow at the nlab entry on math blogs.

This is nice, thanks !
I am not sure if it would be worthwhile to mention that (conversely to Physics SE for example) we are welcoming mathematical topics useful for and used by physicists too ?

@Dilaton Sure, I'll add that as soon as possible.
Most recent comments show all comments

the 2015 image is still there below the 2016 one!

@Arnold that isn't the 2015 image, it's just a smaller version of the 2016 one.

+ 2 like - 0 dislike

Wait for the "Reviews" section 

Update: The reviews section has been released!

The "Reviews" section is for discussing physics journal papers, arxiv papers, papers in conference proceedings, conference talks, important seminars, and so on. It is not launched yet; however, when it is finally launched, that will be when Physics Overflow leaves it's public beta.  

Here's what's planned so far for the "Reviews" category:  

  • All physics papers will be imported from the ArXiV by a bot through the OAI-PMH of ArXiV. What will appear here on Physics Overflow is a just a link to the paper.   
  • Papers or other material can be imported manually through a plugin or maybe directly asking a question in the "Reviews" section. Again, what will appear here is simply a link to the paper or material. 
  • Users with editing priviledges can edit the post (others can suggest edits) to summarise the findings of the paper.     
  • There will be a terminology change from Question to Submission.    
  • There will be a terminology change from Answer to Review.    
  • Users can write referee reports about the accuracy of the paper by writing a review.   
  • Users can suggest papers to cite, or point out papers that have done similar work in the comments (no terminology change for this one).  
  • Users can ask questions about the paper in the comments. 
  • There will be two voting criteria; originality and accuracy for voting on the submission, but voting on the reviews will be the same.    
  • When an author comes here to defend the work, then he would be able to claim authorship for the paper through a thread "Paper Authorship Claims", after which an administrator can change the author of the post to this author.  
  • Since there can be multiple authors for a paper, in the new type of questions (submissions), we will have not only two voting criteria but possibility for multiple authors to a question who can edit it freely and gain the complete reputation (i.e. the reputation is not divided among them, but each gets the full reputation, because another author helping to defend must not reduce the other's reputation) for the paper.    
  • Since there are two voting criteria for submissions, there will be an additional score displayed simply for display purposes, calculated by \(y= \mathfrak{S} \exp\left( \sqrt[3]{\frac{\mathfrak{\times}}{5}} \right)\) where \(y\) is the display score, \(\mathfrak{S}\) is the accuracy score and \(\mathfrak{\times} \) is the originality score as voted by the voters. The rep gain by each author is \(x=5y\)    
  • People can advertise certain submissions using a small fee of around 5 to 10 dollars which will pay expenses such as our hosting fees, and if polarkernel is fine with it, paying him some money for his dedicated help. As we are not a for-profit, we will not use this money for anything else.   

The following is not yet planned, but we may have a vague idea about it:  

  • Once the reviews section is stable, we could think of locally hosting contributions, if it does not take up too much space and become expensive. 
  • We could even think of locally editing contributions having a LaTeX editor, with our own class file and everything, just for the reviews section so that the TeX file is saved and a PDF file is generated for viewing.
  • We could use an existing Open Source LaTeX editor like ShareLaTeX (github repository)      
  • Those who often summarise papers by editing the questions can be manually awarded a reputation bounty, since there is otherwise no incentive to summarise papers.  
answered Apr 3, 2014 by dimension10 (1,985 points) [ revision history ]
edited Apr 2, 2015 by dimension10

This now exists for some time, more or less as planned. Please contribute informative reviews!

+ 1 like - 0 dislike

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See also in the FAQ

answered Apr 4, 2014 by dimension10 (1,985 points) [ revision history ]
edited Apr 18, 2015 by dimension10

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