Physics World is the membership magazine of the
Institute of Physics, one of the largest physical societies in the world. It is an international monthly magazine covering all areas of physics, pure and applied, and is aimed at physicists in research, industry,
physics outreach, and education worldwide.
Overview
The magazine was launched in 1988 by
IOP Publishing Ltd, under the founding editorship of
Philip Campbell.[citation needed] The magazine is sent free to members of the
Institute of Physics, who can access a digital edition of the magazine; selected articles can be read by anyone for free online. It was redesigned in September 2005 and has an audited circulation of just under 35000.
The current editor is Matin Durrani.[1] Others on the team are Michael Banks (news editor) [2] and Tushna Commissariat and Sarah Teah (features editors). Hamish Johnston, Margaret Harris and Tami Freeman are online editors.
Alongside the print and online magazine, Physics World produces films and two podcasts.[3] The Physics World Stories podcast[4] is hosted by Andrew Glester[5] and is produced monthly. The Physics World Weekly podcast is hosted by James Dacey.[6]
The magazine makes two awards each year. These are the Physics World Breakthrough of the Year and the Physics World Book of the Year, which have both been awarded annually since 2009.[citation needed]
Top 10 works and winners of the Breakthrough of the Year
2009: "to August Jonathan Home and colleagues at NIST for unveiled the first small-scale device that could be described as a complete "
quantum computer"
Top results from Tevatron
Spins spotted in room-temperature silicon
Graphane makes its debut
Magnetic monopoles spotted in spin ices
Water on the Moon
Atoms teleport information over long distance
Black-hole analogue traps sound
Dark matter spotted in Minnesota
A 2.36 TeV big bang at the LHC
2010: "to ALPHA and the ASACUSA group at CERN for have created new ways of controlling
antihydrogen"
Exoplanet atmosphere laid bare
Quantum effects seen in a visible object
Visible-light cloaking of large objects
Hail the first sound lasers
A Bose–Einstein condensate from light
Relativity with a human touch
Towards a Star Wars telepresence
Proton is smaller than we thought
CERN achieves landmark collisions
2011:
Aephraim M. Steinberg and colleagues from the University of Toronto in Canada for using the technique of "weak measurement" to track the average paths of single photons passing through a
Young's interference experiment.[7]
Particle-free quantum communication is achieved in the lab
Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays have extra-galactic origins
‘Time crystals’ built in the lab
Metamaterial enhances natural cooling without power input
Three-photon interference measured at long last
Muons reveal hidden void in Egyptian pyramid
2018: "Discovery that led to the development of “
twistronics”, which is a new and very promising technique for adjusting the electronic properties of graphene by rotating adjacent layers of the material."[14]
Multifunctional carbon fibres enable “massless” energy storage
Compensator expands global access to advanced radiotherapy
Physics World is the membership magazine of the
Institute of Physics, one of the largest physical societies in the world. It is an international monthly magazine covering all areas of physics, pure and applied, and is aimed at physicists in research, industry,
physics outreach, and education worldwide.
Overview
The magazine was launched in 1988 by
IOP Publishing Ltd, under the founding editorship of
Philip Campbell.[citation needed] The magazine is sent free to members of the
Institute of Physics, who can access a digital edition of the magazine; selected articles can be read by anyone for free online. It was redesigned in September 2005 and has an audited circulation of just under 35000.
The current editor is Matin Durrani.[1] Others on the team are Michael Banks (news editor) [2] and Tushna Commissariat and Sarah Teah (features editors). Hamish Johnston, Margaret Harris and Tami Freeman are online editors.
Alongside the print and online magazine, Physics World produces films and two podcasts.[3] The Physics World Stories podcast[4] is hosted by Andrew Glester[5] and is produced monthly. The Physics World Weekly podcast is hosted by James Dacey.[6]
The magazine makes two awards each year. These are the Physics World Breakthrough of the Year and the Physics World Book of the Year, which have both been awarded annually since 2009.[citation needed]
Top 10 works and winners of the Breakthrough of the Year
2009: "to August Jonathan Home and colleagues at NIST for unveiled the first small-scale device that could be described as a complete "
quantum computer"
Top results from Tevatron
Spins spotted in room-temperature silicon
Graphane makes its debut
Magnetic monopoles spotted in spin ices
Water on the Moon
Atoms teleport information over long distance
Black-hole analogue traps sound
Dark matter spotted in Minnesota
A 2.36 TeV big bang at the LHC
2010: "to ALPHA and the ASACUSA group at CERN for have created new ways of controlling
antihydrogen"
Exoplanet atmosphere laid bare
Quantum effects seen in a visible object
Visible-light cloaking of large objects
Hail the first sound lasers
A Bose–Einstein condensate from light
Relativity with a human touch
Towards a Star Wars telepresence
Proton is smaller than we thought
CERN achieves landmark collisions
2011:
Aephraim M. Steinberg and colleagues from the University of Toronto in Canada for using the technique of "weak measurement" to track the average paths of single photons passing through a
Young's interference experiment.[7]
Particle-free quantum communication is achieved in the lab
Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays have extra-galactic origins
‘Time crystals’ built in the lab
Metamaterial enhances natural cooling without power input
Three-photon interference measured at long last
Muons reveal hidden void in Egyptian pyramid
2018: "Discovery that led to the development of “
twistronics”, which is a new and very promising technique for adjusting the electronic properties of graphene by rotating adjacent layers of the material."[14]
Multifunctional carbon fibres enable “massless” energy storage
Compensator expands global access to advanced radiotherapy