Contact
Amy Halsted
halsted aps.org
631-591-4232
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS: 50 YEARS OF MOVING PHYSICS
FORWARD
Ridge, NY, 3 January 2008: The American Physical Society
(APS)
is pleased to announce that the 50th Anniversary of Physical
Review Letters occurs during 2008. We will mark the
occasion
throughout the year with many events relating to the overall
theme: Moving Physics Forward. A new web site,
http://prl.aps.org/50years
, dedicated to the 50th celebration has
been launched and features:
--A series of editorials on issues facing the journal as
well as
on scientific publishing
--Highlighting of selected Letters that have made enduring
contributions to physics
--A 50-year timeline featuring seminal developments in
physics
and physics publishing
--Notice of activities and events to celebrate the 50th
Anniversary of PRL
--Essays covering research, publishing, science policy, and
personal reminiscences of PRL's 50 years
According to APS Editor in Chief Gene Sprouse, "This
year marks
the 50th anniversary of the first 'Letters' journal,
Physical
Review Letters. We are proud that APS started this
innovation in
publishing. PRL is now a premiere physics journal offering
broad
coverage of the most important physics results. Throughout
2008
we will celebrate its first 50 years with items in the
Journal
and on the web, and with events at meetings and
elsewhere."
The anniversary site is part of a brand new PRL web site
(http://prl.aps.org/) that
features a new visual design, clearer
navigation, highlighted content, and quick access to the
latest
Letters and other information about the journal.
"The PRL 50th Anniversary launch presented us with a
golden
opportunity to update the main PRL web site as well,"
said Mark
Doyle, APS Assistant Director of Journal Information Systems
and
leader of the redesign effort. "The new design, which
will be
rolled out to all APS journal websites over the next month,
enables us to better highlight content. But this is just
the
first step - 2008 will bring many more exciting innovations
as we
provide better access to the great wealth of information
published in the APS journals."
--About PRL: Physical Review Letters (PRL) is the world's
foremost physics letters journal, providing rapid
publication of
short reports of significant fundamental research in all
fields
of physics.
--About APS: The American Physical Society is the world's
largest professional body of physicists, representing over
46,000
physicists in academia and industry worldwide. It has
offices in
Ridge, NY; Washington, DC; and College Park, MD. For more
information: www.aps.org
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