Generated by GPT-5-mini| Canadian Journal of Physics | |
|---|---|
| Title | Canadian Journal of Physics |
| Discipline | Physics |
| Abbreviation | Can. J. Phys. |
| Publisher | Canadian Science Publishing |
| Country | Canada |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| History | 1929–present |
| Issn | 0008-4204 |
Canadian Journal of Physics is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research in physics with emphasis on theoretical and experimental studies from researchers affiliated with institutions such as University of Toronto, McGill University, University of British Columbia, Université de Montréal and University of Alberta. The journal has published influential work associated with laboratories and centers including TRIUMF, National Research Council (Canada), Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and CERN, and has been cited in contexts involving agencies like the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council and awards such as the Wolf Prize in Physics.
The journal was founded in 1929 during a period of expansion for Canadian institutions including the National Research Council (Canada), Mount Allison University, McMaster University and Queen's University and was shaped by figures connected to Ernest Rutherford, Arthur Eddington, Niels Bohr, Albert Einstein and contemporaries at Cambridge University and Imperial College London. Early editorial direction intersected with activities at the Royal Society of Canada, the American Physical Society, the Institute of Physics (IOP), and collaborations with international publishers such as Oxford University Press, Springer Science+Business Media and Elsevier. Through the 20th century the journal reflected developments linked to the Manhattan Project, CERN accelerator complex, the advent of quantum mechanics, condensed matter physics, nuclear magnetic resonance, and the rise of computational efforts at centers like Los Alamos National Laboratory and IBM Research.
The journal's scope encompasses areas including atomic physics, molecular physics, condensed matter physics, optics, particle physics, astrophysics, plasma physics and statistical mechanics, and it accepts submissions from investigators at places such as Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Stanford University and California Institute of Technology. Peer review procedures draw on standards used by organizations including the Committee on Publication Ethics, the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and editorial practices of journals like Physical Review Letters, Journal of Chemical Physics, Nature Physics and Science. Policies on authorship, conflicts of interest, and data availability reference expectations from bodies such as Canadian Institutes of Health Research, European Research Council and grant agencies like the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
Distributed monthly, the journal is published by Canadian Science Publishing with production links to printers and platforms associated with CrossRef, PubMed Central, SciFinder and indexing services that also serve journals from Wiley-Blackwell, Taylor & Francis and American Institute of Physics. Access models have evolved in relation to initiatives like Plan S, transformations seen at Nature Publishing Group, and open access policies influenced by funders including the Wellcome Trust and the European Commission. Electronic hosting, licensing and archiving intersect with infrastructure such as PORTICO, the Digital Object Identifier system, and institutional repositories at universities like University of Waterloo and McGill University.
The journal is abstracted and indexed in major services including Web of Science, Scopus, INSPIRE-HEP, Chemical Abstracts Service, MathSciNet where relevant, and specialist databases used by researchers at CERN, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Fermilab and Max Planck Society institutes. Its citation metrics are tracked alongside titles appearing in lists maintained by Clarivate Analytics, Elsevier and bibliometric analyses cited by organizations such as UNESCO and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Over decades the journal has published influential work touching topics associated with breakthroughs and researchers linked to John Bardeen, Lev Landau, Wolfgang Pauli, Richard Feynman, Philip W. Anderson and studies resonant with experiments at Bell Labs, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory and collaborations involving TRIUMF. Contributions include papers on superconductivity, semiconductor physics, nuclear structure, spectroscopy, atomic collision theory and computational methods that have been cited alongside classic works in journals like Physical Review, Reviews of Modern Physics and Journal of Applied Physics.
The editorial board comprises editors and associate editors drawn from universities and institutes such as University of Toronto, McGill University, University of Calgary, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and national laboratories including TRIUMF and the National Research Council (Canada), and the publisher, Canadian Science Publishing, operates in concert with partners like CrossRef, ORCID and national funding bodies including the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. The board's composition and publishing agreements reflect interactions with learned societies including the Royal Society of Canada, the American Physical Society and the Institute of Physics (IOP).
Category:Physics journals