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Physica Scripta is an international scientific journal for experimental and theoretical physics. It was established in 1970 as the successor of Arkiv för Fysik and published by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (KVA). [1] Since 2006, it has been published by IOP Publishing [2] [3] with the endorsement of the KVA. The journal covers both ...
Physica may refer to: Physics (Aristotle) Physica, a twelfth-century medical text by Hildegard of Bingen; Physica, a Dutch scientific journal; Physica A; Physica B; Physica C; Physica D; Physica E; Physica Scripta, an international scientific journal for experimental and theoretical physics
An invited Open Access comment to a special Physica Scripta Focus issue celebrating the 40 year anniversary of the 1975 Nobel Prize in Physics to Aage Bohr, Ben Roy Mottelson and Leo Rainwater edited by Jerzy Dudek, outlines selected highlights from experimental investigations at the Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark, and Daresbury Laboratory, UK ...
Acta Physica Polonica B; Advances in High Energy Physics; European Physical Journal A: Hadrons and Nuclei; European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields; International Journal of Modern Physics E
C. Canadian Journal of Physics; Canadian Journal of Research, Section A: Physical Sciences; Chaos (journal) Chemical Physics (journal) Chinese Journal of Chemical Physics
He was an editor at Physica Scripta between 1988 and 1996 and secretary for the Nobel committee in physics between 1989 and 2003. [2] [6] Bárány has been the chairman of the Kungliga Vetenskaps Societeten in Uppsala since 1994, and of the Kungliga Vetenskapsakademien since 2005. [2] He was earlier the chairman of the Nobel Museum. [7]
Emilio Del Giudice (1 January 1940 – 31 January 2014) was an Italian theoretical physicist who worked in the field of condensed matter. Pioneer of string theory in the early 1970s, later on he became better known for his work with Giuliano Preparata at the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics (INFN);
The Klein paradox is an unexpected consequence of relativity on the interaction of quantum particles with electrostatic potentials. The quantum mechanical problem of free particles striking an electrostatic step potential has two solutions when relativity is ignored.