Latest articles
Confused by the twin paradox? Maybe philosophy can help
Robert P Crease discusses a puzzle that goes to the heart of science and philosophy
Around the world in 16 orbits: a day in the life of the International Space Station
Kate Gardner reviews the novel Orbital by Samantha Harvey
Opinion and reviews
Heisenberg gets ‘let off the hook’ in new historical drama based on the Farm Hall transcripts
Philip Ball reviews Farm Hall by Katherine Moar at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, London, which runs until 31 August 2024
Paradigm shifts: positivism, realism and the fight against apathy in the quantum revolution
Jim Baggott reviews Escape from Shadow Physics: the Quest to End the Dark Ages of Quantum Theory by Adam Forrest Kay
Constellation and Dark Matter: the TV series that could change your view of quantum mechanics
What can quantum multiple-world fiction teach us about identity, ask Robert P Crease and Jennifer Carter
Physics cookbook is fun but fails to gel
Megan Povey reviews Physics in the Kitchen by George Vekinis
When the world went wild for uranium: tales from the history of a controversial element
Margaret Harris reviews Chain Reactions: a Hopeful History of Uranium by Lucy Jane Santos
Could the answer to the Antikythera astronomical device emerge from a Manhattan basement?
Robert P Crease meets Michael Dubno, who is trying to solve the mystery of the ancient Antikythera mechanical device
The Nobel Prize for Physics
Explore the work of recent Nobel laureates, find out what happens behind the scenes, and discover some who were overlooked for the prize
Features
Explore more in culture, history and society
Roger Penrose: the Nobel laureate with a preference for transparencies over slideshows
Tushna Commissariat recounts a fascinating chat with Roger Penrose
Laureates on film: Nobel winners who have graced our silver screen
Chatting with Frank Wilczek and Albert Fert
How to rotate your mattress like a physics Nobel prizewinner
A tongue-in-cheek e-mail exchange with 1973 Nobel Prize winner Brian Josephson shows that for some laureates, scientific rigour extends to ordinary life, too
Use our infographic to predict this year’s Nobel prize winners
We are expecting a prize in condensed-matter physics in 2024
Nobel predictions and humorous encounters with physics laureates
Physics World editors gaze into their crystal ball and reminisce about past Nobel winners
Physicists reveal the mechanics of tea scum
Researchers have looked at how tea scum breaks apart when stirred
The physics of cycling’s ‘Everesting’ challenge revealed
Everesting involves a cyclist riding up and down a given hill multiple times until the ascent totals the elevation of Mount Everest – or 8848 m
Shrinivas Kulkarni: curiosity and new technologies inspire Shaw Prize in Astronomy winner
"No shortage of phenomena to explore," says expert on variable and transient objects
Researchers cut to the chase on the physics of paper cuts
A paper cut “sweet spot” just happens to be close to the thickness of paper in print magazines
The Wow! signal: did a telescope in Ohio receive an extraterrestrial communication in 1977?
This podcast features an astrobiologist who has identified similar radio signals
Abdus Salam: honouring the first Muslim Nobel-prize-winning scientist
Claudia de Rham and Ian Walmsley pay tribute to the contributions of the great theorist Abdus Salam
Physics for a better future: mammoth book looks at science and society
Our podcast guest is Christophe Rossel, co-author of EPS Grand Challenges
Pumping on a half-pipe: physicists model a skateboarding skill
Variable pendulum describes how energy is pumped into the system
Abdus Salam: celebrating a unifying force in global physics
Our podcast guests are Claudia de Rham and Ian Walmsley at Imperial College
Rumours spread like nuclear fission, say physicists
Neutrons are rumours and people are uranium isotopes in new model
Could humans run on water?
Scientists have investigated whether we could mimic basilisk lizards, on Earth or elsewhere
Aperiodicity: the dance event bringing non-repeating patterns to life
Matin Durrani reviews Aperiodic – an art-science performance from South West Dance Theatre
Clams and algae collaborate to harvest sunlight very efficiently
Symbiotic relationship is explored by physicists
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