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Physics

"Physics Today" versus "Scientific Blogging"

Time for a quick compare-and-contrast. Here is what "Physics Today" lists as their top stories and most popular articles for July 2009: Farewell to the bevatron Earliest astrophysical object yet seen House narrowly passes climate change bill Miller to run nuclear division at DoE
By Alex "Sandy" Antunes in The Daytime Astronomer | July 28, 2009

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Time for a quick compare-and-contrast. Here is what "Physics Today" lists as their top stories and most popular articles for July 2009:

  • Farewell to the bevatron
  • Earliest astrophysical object yet seen
  • House narrowly passes climate change bill
  • Miller to run nuclear division at DoE
  • Industrial R&D in transition
  • Need for clean energy, waste transmutation revives interest in hybrid fusion–fission reactor
  • Probing stars with optical and near-IR interferometry
  • Rogue waves

Guessing that the equivalence to 'top stories' and 'most popular' is our ScientificBlogging.com 'most recent' and 'most popular' (still listed even though not recent), we have:

  • B-Quark Jets: Keys to New Discoveries
  • The Nuts and Bolts of the "Nail The Higgs Down" Plot
  • Fireworks Display In NGC 7293 - The Helix Nebula
  • Running Top Mass Points To SUSY-Like Higgs
  • Just One Higgs Search Plot...
  • The blogosphere misses what peer review hits... for once.
  • Large Extra Dimensions At Reach Next Year!
  • How Space Inspires Fashion
  • Can You Test Einstein's Theory Of Relativity In The Lab?
  • MAVEN, Deuterium And A Mission To Mars
  • Apollo 12: The Greatest Moon Mission
  • B-Quark Jets: Keys to New Discoveries

Is PT timely, are we relevant, just how well do we match up to "Physics Today"?

Alex, the daytime astronomer

The Daytime Astronomer, Tues&Fri here, via RSS feed, and twitter @skyday
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Physics

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