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<summary>Where do I need citations?</summary>
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Make sure that all statements in your thesis which are not standard textbook physics or a statement of your own work are properly cited. If you copy text from somewhere, because it is better than any text you could produce and fits perfectly, ensure that it is marked as quotation. Make sure that you properly reference your graphics if they are taken from somewhere else and indicate if you modified them. A PhD thesis is a publication! To publish copyright protected material in your work permission of the right owner is required. It is debatable how much modification is required to make it 'your own work'.
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<summary>How should my bibliography look like?</summary>
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The bibliography is equally important as the text. Ensure proper formatting. Reference must be complete (just copy&paste from some BibTeX entry you found somehere is often enough). It must be easy to find a reference, that usually means it must contain at least: Who, where, when and ideally also what. References with 300 Authors is not a good style. Use one or three authors 'et al.' (consistently). If possible add the DOI (ideally as link), or if not available the arXiv number, e.g. arXiv:1304.1710. For web-links, provide the permalink (if available). 'Private Communication' is only acceptable if there is really no other source for this information. If this is a collaboration paper, it is a good style to add the collaboration, e.g.
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> H. Anderhub et al. [FACT Collaboration], Journal of Instrumentation 8 (2013) P06008 [doi:[10.1088/1748-0221/8/06/P06008](https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/8/06/P06008)]
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<summary>Can I use abbreviations?</summary>
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Abbreviatiosn are usually not a good style. Try to avoid abbreviations and make sure they are always properly introduced (ideall in each section individually).
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<summary>How to format my plots?</summary>
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Make sure that all axis are properly labeled. All labels in the plot should have a reasonable size (as a rule of thumb they should not be smaller than the surrounding text). If your plots are a result of different coefficients, cuts, or other changing variables, ideally they are found in the title of the plot but at least must be part of the caption. Make sure that your legend is not even close to your data points, in particular they must not cover your data points (not even the error bars). Ideally, put the legend outside of your plot.
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<summary>Can I use footnotes?</summary>
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In almost all cases, footnotes should just be part of your text. Just format your text accordingly. Only statements or technical details which really disturb the flow of the text should go to a footnote. Generally, they should be avoided.
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