
Academic Physics Infographic Poster
Create a clean academic infographic poster that explains a physics concept with numbered sections, formulas, arrows, and step-by-step diagrams.
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Preview for Academic Physics Infographic Poster, focused on readable formulas, section hierarchy, visual logic, and restrained academic design.
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Academic Physics Infographic Poster
Square academic physics poster with four numbered sections, formulas, arrows, diagrams, and readable explanations.
Create one square premium educational infographic poster explaining [PHYSICS_CONCEPT]. Use a clean modern academic style with a soft neutral background, elegant serif title, minimal sans-serif body text, precise grid alignment, and generous spacing. Structure the poster into four clearly numbered sections: definition, physical mechanism, mathematical relationship, and real-world example. Each section should include a concise editable heading, 1-2 short explanation lines, and one visual aid such as a vector-style diagram, coordinate grid, force arrow, flow line, highlighted box, or simple equation. Use a restrained palette of teal, muted gold, dark gray, and soft highlight tones. Add visual guidance with arrows, dotted paths, small labels, and boxed steps so the viewer can follow the concept logically from top left to bottom right. Make formulas legible and generic unless the user supplies exact notation. Keep the final design polished, readable, and intellectually calm, like a modern textbook poster. Avoid fake scientific claims, invented constants, dense paragraphs, unreadable microtext, incorrect arrows, decorative clutter, over-saturated gradients, copyrighted textbook layouts, and formulas that contradict the chosen concept.
Usage notes
Replace the physics concept, formula notation, example object, section count, language, and color accents before running.
Prompt FAQ
Before you use this prompt
Quick checks for inputs, model fit, and how to adapt the template without weakening the result.
Which concepts work best with this prompt?
It works for concepts with a visible mechanism, such as lift, torque, wave interference, refraction, electromagnetism, pressure, or orbital motion.
Can I use exact formulas?
Yes. Provide the formulas and symbols yourself, then ask the model to keep them editable and reviewable.
What should I check before publishing?
Review formula accuracy, arrow direction, label readability, section order, and whether the example actually matches the physics concept.
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