I really hope this works... Gotta do this in html - not exactly my strong suite...
Anyway, for a while I wanted to compile a list of fun, interesting, and informative math/science links on the web. Then I realized it was impossible - I'd be here for years and still miss most of them... So now I'm just finding the main sites, especially ones with lots of links already. Otherwise it's up to my discretion...
~ Ya me.
Ignore him. Unless you want to spend a few hours watching a slug tranverse a leaf, by all means...
I've tried to put the link to a main page, but some may be a specific page I really liked. Be sure to look around.
(Scoots over a few inches. That'll protect me from sliming for a few minutes. ~Creepy Crawling.~ Quick, what songs that from? (And who does it?))
The D� Experiment --As they say themselves, this is where a bunch of researchers "attempt to present the results of our research (in particle physics) for the non-specialist". The work of d�, with links to intro particle physics.
The Particle Adventure--This an old fav, back from when I was 'really' chemistry obsessive. Basic, fun, it really is a cute little ad-venture into the world of small. If you know all the 'terms' you could probably skip this one, but it's still fun to investigate.
Physics 2000--Another old, personal favourite. Mostly concerned with atoms at absolute zero, it includes...(drumroll please!)...Bose-Einstein Condensation! (Hey, this is where I found out it existed) Love the graphics and style of this one - easy to understand teaching page.
Infinite Ink--Ooh! Another role model for me
Fractal Sequences--Short but sweet. This is cool stuff.
Tony Smith's Home Page--Most of this seems to be a bit beyond me, but then I'm only in 10th grade here. Tons of reference 'quick' links (my own name - they're something I'm mildly obsessed with) and a range of topics. Definately a place I want to spend some time at.
G J Chaitin's Home Page--Many papers here - all of which I wanna read - even if I can't understand them - they just look yummy :> Also the section "understandable papers on incompleteness" looks god. Subjects range, most about randomness. Sorry, my browser isn't letting me investigate further right now...*sigh*