User:Paul Wormer

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Revision as of 04:16, 22 February 2008 by imported>Paul Wormer (link to publication list, some rewording)
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I retired in 2005 from the Radboud University in Nijmegen (The Netherlands) as an Associate Professor in Theoretical Chemistry. Over the years I (co)authored about 150 research papers published in journals as "the Journal of Chemical Physics", "Molecular Physics", "Physical Review A", etc., see here for a fairly complete list. I got a (cum laude) MSc in Chemical Engineering, but after an internship at a Haber-Bosch plant I decided that Theoretical Chemistry was more my cup of tea. My (cum laude) Ph.D. thesis was on Group Theory and the Theory of Intermolecular Forces; both topics still hold my interest. Most of my working life was on the crossing of Chemistry, Molecular Physics, and Applied Mathematics. Several times I held an appointment as a Visiting Research Professor in Applied Mathematics at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. I was a Visiting Fellow of the Royal Society in Bristol and a Visiting Professor of Theoretical Chemistry in Warsaw.

From October 2006 until August 2007 I contributed to Wikipedia under the name P.wormer. After my relatively late arrival at WP I found that most basic science articles were already in existence, so I added mostly to the niche of more advanced, graduate level, science. After a probation period of nine months I got fed up with continuously defending my work against attacks by science illiterates and fled to Citizendium. On CZ I soon discovered that this encyclopedia was almost virginal and that the foundation in science still had to be laid. So, I will add as many basic science articles as I can to CZ.

I am not a native speaker of English and appreciate it very much when my grammar/spelling/wording is improved. I hate it, however, when content that I contributed is removed without good explanation (in the associated talk page or my personal talk page). So, please, if you feel it necessary to delete some of my work (and possibly replace it with something else), explain to me why you think so. I may even agree with you! In Wikipedia I was sometimes criticized as being too abstruse and I had to agree with that several times, after which I tried to do a better job. So, please let me know if you don't understand my writings; together we can make something nice.

On December 24, 2007 I prepared the following list of CZ articles of which I am the main (often the sole) author.

  1. Allotropy
  2. Amedeo Avogadro
  3. Amsterdam
  4. Angular momentum
  5. Angular momentum coupling
  6. Antisymmetrizer
  7. Associated legendre function
  8. Atom
  9. Atomic electron configuration
  10. Atomic mass
  11. Atomic mass constant
  12. Atomic orbital
  13. Atomic weight
  14. Augustin-Louis Cauchy
  15. Avogadro's constant
  16. Belgium
  17. Born-Oppenheimer approximation
  18. Carbon
  19. Classification of rigid rotors
  20. Clebsch-Gordan coefficients
  21. Copernicus
  22. Dalton (unit)
  23. Digital object identifier
  24. Distribution (mathematics)
  25. Eckart conditions
  26. Electron
  27. Electron configuration
  28. Electron orbital
  29. Elementary charge
  30. Elements
  31. Energy
  32. Faraday's constant
  33. Galileo Galilei
  34. Gaussian type orbitals
  35. Gravitation
  36. Holland
  37. Hydrogen
  38. Hydrogen-like atom
  39. Ideal gas law
  40. Intermolecular force
  41. Iron
  42. Jacobus Kapteyn
  43. Johannes Diderik van der Waals
  44. Johannes Kepler
  45. John Dalton
  46. Kilogram
  47. Laplace expansion (potential)
  48. Legendre polynomials
  49. Liter
  50. Lucasian chair
  51. Methane
  52. Molar gas constant
  53. Mole (unit)
  54. Molecular Hamiltonian
  55. Molecular mass
  56. Molecular orbital
  57. Molecular weight
  58. Moller-Plesset
  59. Multipole expansion (interaction)
  60. Multipole expansion of electric field
  61. National Institute of Standards and Technology
  62. Netherlands
  63. Nicolaus Copernicus
  64. Nitrogen
  65. Orbital
  66. Oxygen
  67. Planck's constant
  68. Ptolemy
  69. Relative molecular mass
  70. Rigid rotor
  71. Rotterdam
  72. Slater determinant
  73. Slater orbital
  74. Solid harmonics
  75. Spherical harmonics
  76. Stark effect
  77. The Hague
  78. Unified atomic mass unit
  79. Van der Waals equation
  80. Van der Waals forces
  81. Van der Waals molecule
  82. Van der Waals radius
  83. Wigner D-matrix


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