Score Title Author Discussions Created Updated
Laminar–turbulent transition Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Nucleate boiling Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Properties of water Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Weisz–Prater criterion Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Dense heterarchy Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
P1 phage Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
The Lucifer Principle Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Net-map toolbox Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Sociogram Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Structural cohesion Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Phrases Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Threshold temperatures Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Vactrain Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Balance point temperature Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Cold and heat adaptations in humans Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Curie temperature Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
List of temperature sensors Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Optothermal stability Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Satellite temperature measurements Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN
Lydersen method Wikipedia Bot 00NaN-NaN-NaNNaN-NaN-NaN

Pinned article: Introduction to the OurBigBook Project

Welcome to the OurBigBook Project! Our goal is to create the perfect publishing platform for STEM subjects, and get university-level students to write the best free STEM tutorials ever.
Everyone is welcome to create an account and play with the site: ourbigbook.com/go/register. We belive that students themselves can write amazing tutorials, but teachers are welcome too. You can write about anything you want, it doesn't have to be STEM or even educational. Silly test content is very welcome and you won't be penalized in any way. Just keep it legal!
We have two killer features:
  1. topics: topics group articles by different users with the same title, e.g. here is the topic for the "Fundamental Theorem of Calculus" ourbigbook.com/go/topic/fundamental-theorem-of-calculus
    Articles of different users are sorted by upvote within each article page. This feature is a bit like:
    • a Wikipedia where each user can have their own version of each article
    • a Q&A website like Stack Overflow, where multiple people can give their views on a given topic, and the best ones are sorted by upvote. Except you don't need to wait for someone to ask first, and any topic goes, no matter how narrow or broad
    This feature makes it possible for readers to find better explanations of any topic created by other writers. And it allows writers to create an explanation in a place that readers might actually find it.
    Figure 1.
    Screenshot of the "Derivative" topic page
    . View it live at: ourbigbook.com/go/topic/derivative
  2. local editing: you can store all your personal knowledge base content locally in a plaintext markup format that can be edited locally and published either:
    This way you can be sure that even if OurBigBook.com were to go down one day (which we have no plans to do as it is quite cheap to host!), your content will still be perfectly readable as a static site.
    Figure 5. . You can also edit articles on the Web editor without installing anything locally.
    Video 3.
    Edit locally and publish demo
    . Source. This shows editing OurBigBook Markup and publishing it using the Visual Studio Code extension.
  3. https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ourbigbook/ourbigbook-media/master/feature/x/hilbert-space-arrow.png
  4. Infinitely deep tables of contents:
    Figure 6.
    Dynamic article tree with infinitely deep table of contents
    .
    Descendant pages can also show up as toplevel e.g.: ourbigbook.com/cirosantilli/chordate-subclade
All our software is open source and hosted at: github.com/ourbigbook/ourbigbook
Further documentation can be found at: docs.ourbigbook.com
Feel free to reach our to us for any help or suggestions: docs.ourbigbook.com/#contact