Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of Physics | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of Physics |
| Discipline | Physics |
| Abbreviation | J. Phys. |
| Publisher | Institute of Physics |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| History | 19XX–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 0022-3700 |
Journal of Physics is a peer-reviewed periodical covering research in physics, published by the Institute of Physics. It has served as a venue for work connected to institutions such as Cavendish Laboratory, Imperial College London, University of Cambridge and collaborations involving Max Planck Society, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, CERN, Fermilab and Brookhaven National Laboratory. The journal historically intersected with developments linked to figures associated with Royal Society, Niels Bohr Institute, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Bell Labs and Caltech.
The journal was founded during a period shaped by contributions from researchers at University of Oxford, University of Manchester, King's College London, University of Edinburgh and University of Glasgow, with editorial input reflecting networks tied to Paul Dirac, Erwin Schrödinger, Max Born, Wolfgang Pauli and contemporaries connected to Marie Curie and Enrico Fermi. Early editorial boards featured members from Royal Institution and collaborations influenced by events such as Second World War, Manhattan Project and the postwar expansion of facilities like Argonne National Laboratory. Mid-century shifts involved intersections with theoretical groups at Princeton University, Harvard University and experimental programs at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and Soviet Academy of Sciences. Later decades saw ties to initiatives at Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ETH Zurich and the rise of topics prominent at International Centre for Theoretical Physics.
The journal aimed to publish original research spanning subfields connected to institutions such as CERN and DESY, including condensed matter work aligned with IBM Research and NATO-funded networks, theoretical contributions linked to Perimeter Institute and applied studies arising from collaborations with Siemens and General Electric. It emphasized interfaces with groups at Columbia University, University of Tokyo, Seoul National University, Tsinghua University and University of Sydney, addressing topics of interest to communities engaged with prizes such as the Nobel Prize in Physics, Wolf Prize in Physics and Dirac Medal. The scope covered experimental reports associated with facilities like Diamond Light Source, European XFEL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and theoretical advances echoing work at Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques.
Editorial practices mirrored standards from organizations including the Committee on Publication Ethics and involved peer reviewers drawn from departments at Yale University, University of California, Berkeley, Princeton University and University of Chicago. The publisher maintained policies comparable to those of American Physical Society, Springer Nature and Wiley-Blackwell, and adapted peer-review workflows influenced by platforms like arXiv and repositories associated with Zenodo. Production engaged copyediting traditions practiced at Cambridge University Press and archival arrangements coordinated with libraries including the British Library and Library of Congress.
Article metadata were indexed in databases allied with Web of Science, Scopus, INSPIRE-HEP and NASA ADS, and were discoverable through services such as CrossRef, Google Scholar, PubMed Central for overlapping content, and institutional catalogs at National Institute of Standards and Technology and European Research Council. Citation metrics were reported in contexts paralleling Journal Citation Reports and assessments used by funders like European Commission and agencies such as National Science Foundation.
Noteworthy contributions included papers that intersected historically with research threads linked to Albert Einstein-era problems and later developments associated with Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger, Philip W. Anderson, Lev Landau and John Bardeen. Influential empirical studies related to superconductivity echoed experiments from Bell Labs and Cambridge University Engineering Department, while theoretical breakthroughs paralleled work at Institute for Advanced Study and Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics. The journal's impact was recognized by citations in compilations tied to awards such as the Breakthrough Prize and by usage in curricula at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Los Angeles and University of Oxford.
Over time the title landscape evolved alongside parallel publications like those from Proceedings of the Royal Society A, Physical Review, Journal of Applied Physics, Nature Physics, New Journal of Physics and series issued by IOP Publishing. Continuations and spin-offs connected to editorial decisions produced specialized offshoots comparable to Journal of Statistical Physics, Journal of Chemical Physics, Reports on Progress in Physics and themed collections coordinated with conferences such as International Conference on Solid State Physics, Statistical Mechanics Conference and Quantum Information Processing.
Category:Physics journals