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EDITORIAL

PRC’s 50th Anniversary 1970–2020

June 9, 2021

A look back at Physical Review C’s first half century, and a salute to the talented authors and diligent referees who have made the journal a success.


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NEWS AND COMMENTARY

Uncertainty over First Stars

May 26, 2021

New analysis of nuclear reaction data finds holes in a theory about the first stars.

Synopsis on:
R. J. deBoer et al.
Phys. Rev. C 103, 055815 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Light nuclei with semilocal momentum-space regularized chiral interactions up to third order

This Low Energy Nuclear Physics International Collaboration (LENPIC) paper provides an example of ab-initio nuclear structure calculations worth noting. Using chiral effective field theory starting from two-body and three-body nuclear data, the authors work up through p-shell nuclei, with careful attention paid to quantifying the theoretical uncertainties. The remaining discrepancies with experiment, particularly overbinding in the upper p shell, point to next steps to be taken. As a caveat, known excited states that cannot be well described within current computational limitations are missing.

P. Maris et al.
Phys. Rev. C 103, 054001 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Proton-He3 elastic scattering at intermediate energies

Precise measurements, in proton-3He elastic scattering near 65 MeV, of cross sections, proton and 3He analyzing powers, and the spin correlation coefficient Cy,y are compared with rigorous neutron-3H scattering calculations based upon realistic two-nucleon potentials. Proton-3He scattering at intermediate energies is found to be an excellent tool with which to test nuclear interaction models. Moreover, outstanding features that differ from those seen in nucleon-2H elastic scattering suggest the possibility of exploring T=3/2 three-nucleon forces, which are not accessible in three-nucleon scattering.

A. Watanabe et al.
Phys. Rev. C 103, 044001 (2021)


EDITORIAL

Eight Journals Introduce Letters

March 9, 2021

At the beginning of 2021, eight Physical Review journals began publishing Letters which are intended for the accelerated publication of important new results targeted to the specific readership of each journal.


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NEWS AND COMMENTARY

The Tiniest Superfluid Circuit in Nature

February 25, 2021

A new analysis of heavy-ion collision experiments uncovers evidence that two colliding nuclei behave like a Josephson junction—a device in which Cooper pairs tunnel through a barrier between two superfluids.

Viewpoint on:
G. Potel, F. Barranco, E. Vigezzi, and R. A. Broglia
Phys. Rev. C 103, L021601 (2021)


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EDITORS' SUGGESTION

Fission fragment distributions and their impact on the r-process nucleosynthesis in neutron star mergers

Neutron star merger ejecta are currently the most viable astrophysical site for r-process nucleosynthesis. Fission plays a fundamental role. The manuscript presents an updated scission-point model for fission fragment distributions, which improves agreement with experimental fission yields. Two astrophysical scenarios, based on alternative weak-interaction hypotheses, are employed to reanalyze the role of fission. Regions of the nuclear chart where fission is important are identified, and the impact of fission yields on the final r-process abundance distribution is elaborated.

J.-F. Lemaître, S. Goriely, A. Bauswein, and H.-T. Janka
Phys. Rev. C 103, 025806 (2021)


EDITORIAL

Promoting Inclusive and Respectful Communications

November 18, 2020

APS Editor in Chief, Michael Thoennessen, discusses a new opportunity for communicating authors to include their pronouns together with their contact email in order to promote a more respectful, inclusive, and equitable environment.


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FEATURED IN PHYSICS

50 Years of Physical Review C: Probing the Secrets of Nuclei

Researchers look back at key contributions to the field of nuclear physics.

Special Feature in Physics

Current Issue

Vol. 103, Iss. 6 — June 2021

View Current Issue
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Announcements

Introducing: PRX Energy
June 2, 2021

Opening for submissions this summer, PRX Energy is a new, highly selective open access journal from APS that will communicate and facilitate important advances in energy science and technology for the benefit of humanity. Article publication charges (APCs) will be waived until 2023.

Physical Review C Seeks Lead Editor
May 20, 2021

The American Physical Society invites applications or nominations as part of an international search for the Lead Editor of Physical Review C (PRC).

APS Announces Outstanding Referees for 2021
February 24, 2021

APS has selected 151 Outstanding Referees for 2021 who have demonstrated exceptional work in the assessment of manuscripts published in the Physical Review journals. A full list of the Outstanding Referees is available online.

Rapid Communications papers will now be Letters
November 23, 2020

Starting January 1, 2021, the Rapid Communications article type will be renamed to Letters. With this change, all eight Physical Review journals that had previously classified articles of the type “Rapid Communications” will adopt the practice of Physical Review Applied and now publish such articles as Letters. Learn more

Information on SCOAP3 and Physical Review journals
January 3, 2018

High Energy Physics (HEP) papers published after January 1, 2018 in Physical Review Letters, Physical Review C, and Physical Review D are published open access, paid for centrally by SCOAP3. Library subscriptions will be modified accordingly. This arrangement will initially last for two years, up to the end of 2019.

More Announcements

APS-Max Planck Gesellschaft Pilot Transformative Agreement

APS-MPG

2019 Journal Citation Reports

2019 Journal Citation Reports

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