European Physical Journal

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The European Physical Journal (or EPJ) is a joint publication of EDP Sciences, Springer Science+Business Media, and the Società Italiana di Fisica. It arose in 1998 as a merger and continuation of Acta Physica Hungarica, Anales de Física, Czechoslovak Journal of Physics, Il Nuovo Cimento, Journal de Physique, Portugaliae Physica and Zeitschrift für Physik. The journal is published in various sections, covering all areas of physics.

European Physical Journal
DisciplinePhysics
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
Publisher
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Eur. Phys. J.
Indexing
EPJ A
ISSN1434-6001 (print)
1434-601X (web)
EPJ B
ISSN1434-6028 (print)
1434-6036 (web)
EPJ C
ISSN1434-6044 (print)
1434-6052 (web)
EPJ D
ISSN1434-6060 (print)
1434-6079 (web)
EPJ E
ISSN1292-8941 (print)
1292-895X (web)
EPJ H
ISSN2102-6459 (print)
2102-6467 (web)
EPJ ST
ISSN1951-6355 (print)
1951-6401 (web)
EPJ AP
ISSN1286-0042 (print)
1286-0050 (web)
EPJ Conferences
ISSN2100-014X
Links

History

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In the late 1990s, Springer and EDP Sciences decided to merge Zeitschrift für Physik and Journal de Physique. With the addition of Il Nuovo Cimento from the Societa Italiana di Fisica, the European Physical Journal commenced publication in January 1998. Now EPJ is a merger and continuation of Acta Physica Hungarica, Anales de Fisica, Czechoslovak Journal of Physics, Il Nuovo Cimento, Journal de Physique, Portugaliae Physica and Zeitschrift für Physik.

The short-lived open-access journal family PhysMath Central[1] was merged in 2011 into the European Physical Journal,[2] which has offered an open-access option since 2006.[3]

Topics covered

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The EPJ is published in the following sections:

Controversies

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In 2023, editors retracted a journal article published in 2022 in European Physical Journal Plus that claimed to have found no evidence of climate change.[5][6]

The article was widely shared with article metrics showing that the article was in the 99th percentile (ranked 293rd) of the 512,033 tracked articles of a similar age in all journals, and in the 99th percentile (ranked 1st) of the 41 tracked articles of a similar age in European Physical Journal Plus.[7] The article was cited by climate change denialists and in two segments on Sky News Australia (known for climate science misinformation).[6]

The retraction note does not highlight any error, data or image falsification, plagiarism or other reasons that usually justify a retraction: for a reconstruction of what happened, see[8] and[9] where also the reviewers notes can be found.

References

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  1. ^ "PhysMath Central". PhysMath Central. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  2. ^ "European Physical Journal (EPJ)". EDP Sciences, the Società Italiana di Fisica, and Springer. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  3. ^ "European Physical Journal – Open Access Publishing in the European Physical Journal". EPJ. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  4. ^ Super Utilisateur. "EPJ Web of Conferences". epj.org.
  5. ^ Alimonti, Gianluca; Mariani, Luigi; Prodi, Franco; Ricci, Renato Angelo (2023-08-23). "Retraction Note: A critical assessment of extreme events trends in times of global warming". The European Physical Journal Plus. 138 (8): 743. doi:10.1140/epjp/s13360-023-04386-3. ISSN 2190-5444.
  6. ^ a b Readfearn, Graham (2023-08-25). "Scientific journal retracts article that claimed no evidence of climate crisis". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
  7. ^ "Altmetric – RETRACTED ARTICLE: A critical assessment of extreme events trends in times of global warming". link.altmetric.com. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
  8. ^ Jr, Roger Pielke (2023-07-17). ""Think of the Implications of Publishing"". The Honest Broker. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  9. ^ Jr, Roger Pielke (2023-08-26). "The Alimonti Addendum". The Honest Broker. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
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