Language | English |
---|---|
Edited by | Randall Kamien |
Publication details | |
History | 1893–1913Series I 1913–1970Series II 1970–presentSeries III 1970–presentPhys. Rev. A,B,C,D 1993–presentPhys. Rev. E 1998–presentPhys. Rev. AB 2005–presentPhys. Rev. PER 2008–presentPhysics 2011–presentPhys. Rev. X 2014–presentPhys. Rev. Applied 2016–presentPhys. Rev. Fluids 2017–presentPhys. Rev. Materials 2019–presentPhys. Rev. Research 2020–presentPRX Quantum |
Publisher | American Physical Society (United States) |
Standard abbreviations ISO 4 (alt) · Bluebook (alt) NLM (alt) · MathSciNet (alt ![]() | |
ISO 4 | Phys. Rev. |
Indexing CODEN (alt · alt2) · JSTOR (alt) · LCCN (alt) MIAR · NLM (alt) · Scopus · W&L | |
ISSN | 0031-899X (print) 1536-6065 (web) |
LCCN | 12037719 |
OCLC no. | 01715212 |
Links | |
Physical Review is apeer-reviewedscientific journal established in 1893 byEdward Nichols. It publishesoriginal research as well asscientific andliterature reviews on all aspects ofphysics. It is published by theAmerican Physical Society (APS). The journal is in its third series, and is split in several sub-journals each covering a particular field of physics. It has asister journal,Physical Review Letters, which publishes shorter articles of broader interest.
Physical Review commenced publication in July 1893, organized byCornell University professorEdward Nichols and helped by the new president of Cornell,J. Gould Schurman. The journal was managed and edited at Cornell in upstateNew York from 1893 to 1913 by Nichols,Ernest Merritt, and Frederick Bedell. The 33 volumes published during this time constitutePhysical Review Series I.
TheAmerican Physical Society (APS), founded in 1899, took over its publication in 1913 and startedPhysical Review Series II. The journal remained at Cornell undereditor-in-chiefG. S. Fulcher from 1913 to 1926, before relocating to the location of editorJohn Torrence Tate, Sr.[note 1] at theUniversity of Minnesota. In 1929, the APS started publishingReviews of Modern Physics, a venue for longer review articles. In 1932, the newly formedAmerican Institute of Physics took over publication ofPhysical Review.[1]
During theGreat Depression, wealthy scientistAlfred Loomis anonymously paid the journal's fees for authors who could not afford them.[2]
After Tate's death in 1950, the journals were managed on an interim basis still in Minnesota byE. L. Hill andJ. William Buchta untilSamuel Goudsmit and Simon Pasternack were appointed and the editorial office moved toBrookhaven National Laboratory on EasternLong Island,New York. In July 1958, the sister journalPhysical Review Letters was introduced to publish short articles of particularly broad interest, initially edited byGeorge L. Trigg, who remained as editor until 1988.
In 1970,Physical Review split into sub-journalsPhysical Review A,B,C, andD. A fifth member of the family,Physical Review E, was introduced in 1993 to a large part to accommodate the huge amount of new research innonlinear dynamics. Combined, these constitutePhysical Review Series III.
The editorial office moved in 1980 to its present location across the expressway from Brookhaven National Laboratory. Goudsmit retired in 1974 and Pasternack in the mid-1970s. Past Editors in Chief includeDavid Lazarus (1980–1990;University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign),Benjamin Bederson (1990–1996;New York University),Martin Blume (1996–2007; Brookhaven National Laboratory), andGene Sprouse (2007–2015;SUNY Stony Brook). The current Editor in Chief isMichael Thoennessen, whose term began in September 2017.[3]
To celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the journal, a memoir was published jointly by the APS and AIP.[4]
In 1998, the first issue ofPhysical Review Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams was published, and in 2005,Physical Review Special Topics: Physics Education Research was launched. In January 2016 the names of both journals were changed to remove "Special Topics".[5]Physical Review also started an online magazine,Physical Review Focus, in 1998 to explain and provide historical context for selected articles fromPhysical Review andPhysical Review Letters. This was merged intoPhysics in 2011. The Special Topics journals areopen access;Physics Education Research requires page charges from the authors, butAccelerators and Beams does not. Though not fully open access,Physical Review Letters also requires an author page charge, although this is voluntary. The other journals require such a charge only if manuscripts are not prepared in one of the preferred formats.[6] Since 2011, authors can pay anarticle processing charge to make their papers open access.[7] Such papers are published under the terms of theCreative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (CC-BY).[8]Physical Review Letters celebrated their 50th birthday in 2008.[9] The APS has acopyright policy to permit the author to reuse parts of the published article in a derivative or new work, including onWikipedia.[10]
The APS has an online publication entitledPhysics,[11] aiming to help physicists and physics students to learn about new developments outside of their own subfield. This now includes the general-interest articles that appeared asPhysical Review Focus. A short-lived journal, also calledPhysics, was published byPergamon Press and Physics Publishing Co. from 1964 through 1968, with the goal of printing "a selection of papers which are worth the attention of all physicists."[12] The four volumes of this journal were eventually made freely available online by the APS under the alternative titlePhysics Physique Физика, reflecting how the title was originally printed on the journal covers and how it was sometimes referred to in the years since.[13][14][15]
It also publishesPhysical Review X,[16] an online-onlyopen access journal. It is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes, as timely as possible, original research papers from all areas of pure, applied, and interdisciplinary physics. In 2014Physical Review Applied[17] began publishing research across all aspects of experimental and theoretical applications of physics, including their interactions with other sciences, engineering, and industry. In 2016 the APS launchedPhysical Review Fluids "to include additional areas offluid dynamics research",[18] and in 2017 it launchedPhysical Review Materials "to fill a gap" in the coverage of materials research.[19] In 2019Physical Review Research was launched to provide a broad fully open-access journal at about the same selectivity level as the olderA–E journals. In 2020,PRX Quantum was launched to provide a home for and connection between the numerous research communities that make up quantum information science and technology, spanning from pure science to engineering to computer science and beyond.[20] In 2023PRX Life was launched to advance research from the interdisciplinary communities at the interface of the physical and life sciences.[21]
Journal | ISO 4 abbreviation | Editor(s) | Impact factor (2023) | Published | Scope | ISSN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Physical Review Letters | Phys. Rev. Lett. | Hugues Chaté Robert Garisto Samindranath Mitra | 8.1 | 1958–present | The full range ofapplied,fundamental, andinterdisciplinary physics research topics | ISSN 0031-9007 (print) ISSN 1079-7114 (web) |
Physical Review X | Phys. Rev. X | Denis Bartolo Ling Miao | 11.6 | 2011–present | PRX covers the full spectrum of subject areas in physics and pays particular attention to innovative interdisciplinary research of wide impact | ISSN 2160-3308 (web) |
PRX Energy | PRX Energy | David Scanlon Jacilynn (Brant) Otero Margaret Hudson | 2021– present | PRX Energy is a highly selective, open access journal featuring energy science and technology research with an emphasis on outstanding and lasting impact. | ISSN 2768-5608 (web) | |
PRX Quantum | PRX Quantum | Stephen Bartlett Katiuscia N. Cassemiro | 9.3 | 2020–present | PRX Quantum publishes research in quantum information science and technology, spanning from pure science to engineering to computer science and beyond. | ISSN 2691-3399 (web) |
PRX Life | PRX Life | Margaret Gardel Serena Bradde | 2022–present | PRX Life will publish outstanding research at all scales of biological organization, including a focus on quantitative biological research. | (web) | |
Reviews of Modern Physics | Rev. Mod. Phys. | Randall Kamien Debbie Brodbar | 45.9 | 1929–present | The full range of applied, fundamental, and interdisciplinary physics research topics | ISSN 0034-6861 (print) ISSN 1539-0756 (web) |
Physical Review A[note 2] | Phys. Rev. A | Jan Michael Rost Thomas Pattard | 2.6 | 1970–present | Atomic, molecular, and optical physics, foundations ofquantum mechanics andquantum information | ISSN 1050-2947 (print) ISSN 1094-1622 (web) |
Physical Review B[note 2] | Phys. Rev. B | Stephen Nagler Anthony M. Begley | 3.2 | 1970–present | The full range ofcondensed matter,materials physics, and related subfields | ISSN 1098-0121 (print) ISSN 1550-235X (web) |
Physical Review C | Phys. Rev. C | Joseph I. Kapusta Christopher Wesselborg | 3.2 | 1970–present | Experimental and theoretical results in all aspects ofnuclear physics | ISSN 0556-2813 (print) ISSN 1089-490X (web) |
Physical Review D | Phys. Rev. D | Mirjam Cvetič Urs M. Heller | 4.6 | 1970–present | Experimental and theoretical results in all aspects ofparticle physics,field theory,gravitation, andcosmology | ISSN 1550-7998 (print) ISSN 1550-2368 (web) |
Physical Review E | Phys. Rev. E | Uwe C. Täuber Dirk Jan Bukman | 2.2 | 1993–present | Statistical,nonlinear,biological andsoft matter physics | ISSN 1539-3755 (print) ISSN 1550-2376 (web) |
Physical Review Research | Phys. Rev. Res. | Nicola Spaldin Raissa D’Souza Juan-José Liétor-Santos | 3.5 | 2019–present | All research topics of interest to the physics community | ISSN 2643-1564 (web) |
Physical Review Accelerators and Beams | Phys. Rev. Accel. Beams | Frank Zimmermann Debbie Brodbar | 1.5 | 1998–present | All topics inaccelerator science, applications, and technology | ISSN 2469-9888 (web) |
Physical Review Applied | Phys. Rev. Appl. | Stephen R. Forrest Matthew Eager Jelena Vučković | 3.8 | 2014–present | All aspects of experimental and theoretical applications of physics | ISSN 2331-7019 (web) |
Physical Review Fluids | Phys. Rev. Fluids | Eric Lauga Beverley McKeon Bradley Rubin | 2.5 | 2016–present | All aspects offluid dynamics research | ISSN 2469-990X (web) |
Physical Review Materials | Phys. Rev. Mater. | Chris Leighton Athanasios Chantis | 3.1 | 2017–present | Wide range of topics onmaterials research | ISSN 2475-9953 (web) |
Physical Review Physics Education Research | Phys. Rev. Phys. Educ. Res. | Charles Henderson Debbie Brodbar | 2.6 | 2005–present | Experimental and theoreticalphysics education research | ISSN 2469-9896 (web) |
Physics | Physics | Matteo Rini | 2008–present | All ofPhysics | ISSN 1943-2879 (web) | |
Physical Review, Series I | Phys. Rev. | 1893–1912 | All ofPhysics | |||
Physical Review, Series II[note 2] | Phys. Rev. | 1913–1969 | All of Physics | |||
Physics Physique Физика[note 3] | Philip Warren Anderson B. T. Matthias | 1964–1968 |
The term of copyright on volumes published before 1928 has expired. These volumes are available online for free in their entirety: