Weekend Wiki Party 11 - Electricity and Magnetism

Welcome to the Weekend Wiki Party, an ongoing project on Brilliant to fill in the wikis that help make Brilliant a great place to improve in math, science, and problem solving.

What makes a great wiki? There are a few characteristics that we look for in the wiki pages that we share out widely (on Facebook, etc.). Here are a few of them:

A great wiki has:

  • clear explanations that would help someone understand the concept (not just the procedure or how to do it, but WHY it is that way)
  • example problems that help clarify how this idea works in practice
  • embedded community problems that allow people to try the idea themselves
  • [optional] visuals that help people understand the idea

Obviously, our explanations don't just get that way overnight - it usually takes a lot of people working together for quite awhile to get a page to the point where it's helpful, authoritative, and beautiful. The good news: you can help! Every contribution helps, no matter how small. Please feel free to jump in and edit any wiki pages you see that you think could be improved, even if it's just adding an example or even fixing a typo.

Here are a few E&M pages that need some attention, but please feel free to contribute anywhere you like (just leave a comment and let us know):

By the way, if you want to see an example of a great page (also in E&M), take a look at Gauss' Law.

As always, please leave a comment and let us know if you were able to help out! Thanks for making Brilliant so great.

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Note by Calvin Lin
6 years ago

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  Easy Math Editor

This discussion board is a place to discuss our Daily Challenges and the math and science related to those challenges. Explanations are more than just a solution — they should explain the steps and thinking strategies that you used to obtain the solution. Comments should further the discussion of math and science.

When posting on Brilliant:

  • Use the emojis to react to an explanation, whether you're congratulating a job well done , or just really confused .
  • Ask specific questions about the challenge or the steps in somebody's explanation. Well-posed questions can add a lot to the discussion, but posting "I don't understand!" doesn't help anyone.
  • Try to contribute something new to the discussion, whether it is an extension, generalization or other idea related to the challenge.
  • Stay on topic — we're all here to learn more about math and science, not to hear about your favorite get-rich-quick scheme or current world events.

MarkdownAppears as
*italics* or _italics_ italics
**bold** or __bold__ bold

- bulleted
- list

  • bulleted
  • list

1. numbered
2. list

  1. numbered
  2. list
Note: you must add a full line of space before and after lists for them to show up correctly
paragraph 1

paragraph 2

paragraph 1

paragraph 2

[example link](https://brilliant.org)example link
> This is a quote
This is a quote
    # I indented these lines
    # 4 spaces, and now they show
    # up as a code block.

    print "hello world"
# I indented these lines
# 4 spaces, and now they show
# up as a code block.

print "hello world"
MathAppears as
Remember to wrap math in \( ... \) or \[ ... \] to ensure proper formatting.
2 \times 3 2×3 2 \times 3
2^{34} 234 2^{34}
a_{i-1} ai1 a_{i-1}
\frac{2}{3} 23 \frac{2}{3}
\sqrt{2} 2 \sqrt{2}
\sum_{i=1}^3 i=13 \sum_{i=1}^3
\sin \theta sinθ \sin \theta
\boxed{123} 123 \boxed{123}

Comments

Sir, I have added a little information to the Conductors wiki.

Ansh Bhatt - 6 years ago

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Thanks!!

Calvin Lin Staff - 6 years ago

Sir I have added some content to the electrostatics wiki. Hope it is good!

Sravanth C. - 5 years, 11 months ago
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