Sandcastles, rollercoasters and dream destinations: Physics World goes on holiday
There’s physics wherever you look on holiday, as you can discover in the August 2021 issue of Physics World magazine
Thank you for registering with Physics World
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
I’m editor-in-chief of Physics World, where I help the editorial team to come up with brilliant, thoughtful, informative and entertaining articles and multimedia from every corner of physics and from all over the globe. Before moving into publishing, I studied chemical physics at the University of Bristol and went on to do a PhD and postdoc in polymer physics with Athene Donald at the University of Cambridge. These days I still enjoy covering practical, everyday physics of that kind and have a soft spot for science communication and the history of physics. I also like reporting on my various trips and visits around the world meeting all kinds of people in the physics community. Outside work, I’m busy thinking up a sequel to my popular-science book Furry Logic: the Physics of Animal Life, which I wrote with Liz Kalaugher, and also have an unhealthy interest in Birmingham City FC and the German language.
(Image courtesy Jo Hansford Photography)
There’s physics wherever you look on holiday, as you can discover in the August 2021 issue of Physics World magazine
Extra funding for science and technology at the UK's Ministry of Defence has created an urgent need for physicists as well as scientists and engineers from all backgrounds
City University of Hong Kong is seeking the ‘brightest and best’ early-career physicists with a breadth of international research experience
A free online training programme from IOP Publishing enables early-career researchers to gain the skills and confidence they need to submit their first peer review
How the Cape sundew plant is inspiring artificial, robotic limbs
Running from 14 to 18 June 2021, it features free-to-view webinars plus podcasts, research updates and articles from our quantum student network
German nanotechnology specialist attocube says its attoDRY800 cryostat enables quantum scientists to "reclaim the optical table" and focus on their research not the experimental set-up
The June 2021 issue of Physics World includes a look at questions in physics that are taking a long time to solve
Irina Grigorescu, a medical physicist at King’s College London, explains how artificial intelligence can transform medical physics
Oxford Instruments NanoScience is partnering in a three-year project to create and develop the UK's first quantum computer capable of running end-user applications in the cloud