Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to khpot.com

Kathy Hoogeboom-Pot – Physicist based in Hillsboro, Oregon · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
66match
burcuozden.com
Burcu Ozden – PhD in Physics
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
aetb.me
Dr. Alec Tewsley-Booth – Physicist | Educator | Maker
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
jsbryaniv.com
Shep Bryan IV | Physicist and Innovator
2 shared topicsscience
64match
albertmichelson.com
Albert A. Michelson, Physicist – First American to win the Nobel Prize
2 shared topicsphysics
64match
lowefilms.com
David Lowe – Nuclear Physicist, Actor, Composer, Author and Radio & TV Presenter
2 shared topicsphysics
64match
bvorselaars.com
Bart Vorselaars – Dr Bart Vorselaars. Theoretical physicist, University of Lincoln
2 shared topicsphysics
64match
mukundrb.com
Mukund R. Bharadwaj | Astro-Particle Physicist & Researcher
2 shared topicsphysics
63match
recreationalphysics.com
Recreational Physics
2 shared topicsphysics
63match
pacosalces.com
Francisco Salces Carcoba | Experimental quantum physicist of sorts (he/his/him)
2 shared topicsphysics
63match
cafethephysics.com
Cafe the Physics
2 shared topicsphysics
63match
attosecondindia.com
Attosecond Physics
2 shared topicsphysics
63match
mricomics.com
MRI Physics Comics
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
padipucast.com
Padipucast Physics Simulations
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
123iitjee.com
Physics Guru
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
cuwps.com
Cambridge University Women in Physics Society | CUWPS
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
acp.org
American Center for Physics - AIP.ORG
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
addledmind.org
addledmind | Theoretical physics research and neurodiversity
2 shared topicsphysics
62match
advlab.org
Experimental Physics | Advanced Laboratory Physics Association
2 shared topicsphysics

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.