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While the American Physical Society (APS) has its own style guide defined via the document Physical Review Style and Notation Guide, [11] it still uses the AIP citation format and follows much of the style conventions of the AIP style. In chemistry, there is the ACS style, created and developed by the American Chemical Society (ACS).
REVTeX is a collection of LaTeX macros which is maintained and distributed by the American Physical Society with auxiliary files and a user support guide, as part of a "REVTeX toolbox." REVTeX is used to submit papers to journals published by the American Physical Society (APS), the American Institute of Physics (AIP), and the Optical Society ...
The American Physical Society was founded on May 20, 1899, when thirty-six physicists gathered at Columbia University for that purpose. They proclaimed the mission of the new Society to be "to advance and diffuse the knowledge of physics", and in one way or another the APS has been at that task ever since.
The AIP was founded in 1931 as a response to lack of funding for the sciences during the Great Depression. [3] The AIP was founded in 1931 at a joint meeting between four physics societies: the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of America, the Acoustical Society of America, and the Society of Rheology.
American Astronomical Society; American Bryological and Lichenological Society; American Fern Society; American Junior Academy of Sciences; American Meteor Society; American Physiological Society; American Scientific Glassblowers Society; American Social Science Association; American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; American ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... The APS−American Physical Society: a physics society based in the United States
American Physical Society publications This page was last edited on 26 June 2019, at 17:35 (UTC) . Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ; additional terms may apply.
The Physics and Astronomy Classification Scheme (PACS) is a scheme developed in 1970 [1] by the American Institute of Physics (AIP) for classifying scientific literature using a hierarchical set of codes. [2] PACS has been used by over 160 international journals, [1] including the Physical Review series since 1975.