Monday, May 11, 2009

Physicists understand the web better than us, part 28596

A new physics review site. via the baconmeister:
Physicists are drowning in a flood of research papers in their own fields and coping with an even larger deluge in other areas of physics. The Physical Review journals alone published over 18,000 papers last year. How can an active researcher stay informed about the most important developments in physics?

Physics highlights exceptional papers from the Physical Review journals. To accomplish this, Physics features expert commentaries written by active researchers who are asked to explain the results to physicists in other subfields. These commissioned articles are edited for clarity and readability across fields and are accompanied by explanatory illustrations.

Each week, editors from each of the Physical Review journals choose papers that merit this treatment, aided by referee comments and internal discussion. We select commentary authors from around the world who are known for their expertise and communication skills and we devote much effort to editing these commentaries for broad accessibility.

Physics features three kinds of articles: Viewpoints are essays of approximately 1000–1500 words that focus on a single Physical Review paper or PRL letter and put this work into broader context. Trends are concise review articles (3000–4000 words in length) that survey a particular area and look for interesting developments in that field. Synopses (200 words) are staff-written distillations of interesting and important papers each week. In addition, we intend to publish selected Letters to the Editor to allow readers a chance to comment on the commentaries and summaries.

Physics provides a much-needed guide to the best in physics, and we welcome your comments (physics@aps.org).

What an excellent idea !

3 comments:

  1. I guess not surprising that a study to analyse the emergency of new disciplines was lead by a physicist:

    http://arxiv.org/abs/0904.1234

    --Sanatan

    ReplyDelete
  2. of course...they are researchers :)
    and everybody understands the internet better than me=)

    ReplyDelete

Disqus for The Geomblog