Piperic
similar sites
‹ profile

Sites similar to macenulty.com

Lórien MacEnulty – Computational Physicist · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
68match
anamariahell.com
Anamaria Hell – Theoretical Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
68match
kemaltezgin.com
Kemal Tezgin – Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
kegulu.com
Kegu Lu — Computational Materials Science
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
idiosophy.com
Idiosophy – A physicist loose among the liberal arts
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
shinichiroyano.com
Shinichiro Yano – A physicist thinking with wiriting
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
alextinguely.com
Alex Tinguely – PhD, Plasma Physics, MIT
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
sanjibkatuwal.com
Sanjib Katuwal — Theoretical Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
rpsand.com
Radha Pyari Sandhir – Physicist, Scientific Adviser, & Writer
2 shared topicsphysics
66match
bvorselaars.com
Bart Vorselaars – Dr Bart Vorselaars. Theoretical physicist, University of Lincoln
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
kedmond.com
Kazem Edmond, Ph.D. – A soft matter physicist living in New Jersey
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
pielaszek.com
PIELASZEK RESEARCH – Drag & Drop Physics
2 shared topicsscience
65match
oganozsoy.com
Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
royalmatterlab.com
Royal Matter Lab – where physics meets beauty
2 shared topicsscience
65match
samuelpatrone.com
Samuel Patrone | Phenomenological Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
axtonvass.com
Axton Vass — Future Theoretical Physicist
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
icnmd.com
ICNMD '24 – Conference
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
akumgill.com
Akum Gill – Personal Website
2 shared topicsphysics
65match
orgiuresearchgroup.com
Orgiu Research Group – Molecular and Device Physics
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.