Welcome to EmergentGravity.org - the first
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The picture shows two Maori (indigenous people of New Zealand) people exchanging a Hongi as part of a traditional greeting. One presses one's nose to another persons and through this act you turn from a nanuhiri (visitor) to a tangata whenua (one of the people of the land). We hope that visitors to this website will become "people of the land" and help create a stimulating community for quantum gravity.
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Links
We should open this site to some of our memebers to extend the site..? Do you think this is a good idea?
Databases At Various Physics Institutions
- Lots of electronic physics news journals (at Brown U.)
- Physics Arxiv papers Repository:
- Mentor system: Frontpage
- XXX E-print system (form based)
- Karczmarek Bittorrent based download of hep-th, gr-qc and quant-ph archive.
- SISSA/Babbage W3 server
- SLAC services: SPIRES HEP preprints search or other SPIRES databases
- Particle Physics Handbook
- Physics Journals Online. Many of these may only be accessible from a UBC computer as they are restricted to institutions who already purchase institutional copies of the paper journal.
- APS (Phys. Rev family)
- AIP (many free journals)
- IOP (J. Phys family etc.)
- AAS (Astrophysical J.)
- Scholar's Protal Access via UBC Library to journals of Academic Press, Elsevier Science, Kluwer Publishers, Springer-Verlag, and Wiley Publishing
- Elsevier (can see lists of all of their journals, which for a price can be obtained in an electronic version, though most are not on the WorldWideWeb)
- Springer-Verlag (many journals, including the Z. Phys. family and Astronomy and Astrophysics - currently offering free electronic access during an indeterminate testing period)
- Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society(Only Table of Contents and Letters available on line)
- Net Advance of Physics A general Physics Web server of variable quality- giving introductions to a variety of Physics topics.
- As well as the above, we also have CERN and DESY (including lattice HEP information), and there are oodles of other organizations, too.
- HEPIC, the High Energy Physics Information Center at Fermilab
- Quantum Rebel? Comments on New Scientist story "Quantum Rebel" July 24 2004.

