A Reconsideration of Ştefania Mărăcineanu’s Measurements of Polonium-210’s Half-Life: Understanding Her Claim to the Discovery of Artificial Radioactivity Dorel Bucurescu OriginalPaper 11 August 2020 Pages: 162 - 181
Joshua Nall, News from Mars: Mass Media and the Forging of a New Astronomy, 1860–1910, Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2019, 287 pages, $50 (hardcover) Robert W. Smith Book Review 09 August 2020 Pages: 182 - 184
Enrico Fermi’s Discovery of Neutron-Induced Artificial Radioactivity: A Case of “Emanation” from “Divine Providence” Francesco GuerraMatteo LeoneNadia Robotti OriginalPaper 06 July 2020 Pages: 129 - 161
Don’t Be Like Ike Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 12 June 2020 Pages: 53 - 54
The Battle of the Astronomers: Johann Adam Schall von Bell and Ferdinand Verbiest at the Court of the Celestial Emperors (1660–1670) Stefano Salvia OriginalPaper 02 June 2020 Pages: 81 - 109
When Missionary Astronomy Encountered Chinese Astrology: Johann Adam Schall von Bell and Chinese Calendar Reform in the Seventeenth Century Liyuan Liu OriginalPaper 22 May 2020 Pages: 110 - 126
The Concept of Fact in German Physics around 1900: A Comparison between Mach and Einstein Elske de WaalSjang L. ten Hagen OriginalPaper Open access 22 May 2020 Pages: 55 - 80
“It’s better to forget physics”: The Idea of the Tactical Nuclear Weapon in the Early Cold War Christian P. Ruhl OriginalPaper 03 March 2020 Pages: 26 - 51
Recentering the History of Physics Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 30 April 2020 Pages: 1 - 2
Physics and (Natural) Philosophy Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 04 December 2019 Pages: 255 - 256
Varying Constants of Nature: Fragments of a History Helge Kragh OriginalPaper 29 November 2019 Pages: 257 - 273
Biography and the History of Physics Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 16 September 2019 Pages: 161 - 162
Correction to: From Liverpool to Beijing and Chongqing: William Band’s Adventure in Wartime China Danian Hu Correction 06 September 2019 Pages: 252 - 252
What the Middle-Aged Galileo Told the Elderly Galileo: Galileo’s Search for the Laws of Fall Penha Maria Cardozo DiasMariana Faria Brito FrancisquiniMarta Feijó Barroso OriginalPaper 06 September 2019 Pages: 194 - 221
Karl Przibram: Radioactivity, Crystals, and Colors Wolfgang L. Reiter OriginalPaper Open access 12 August 2019 Pages: 163 - 193
From Liverpool to Beijing and Chongqing: William Band’s Adventure in Wartime China Danian Hu OriginalPaper 02 August 2019 Pages: 222 - 251
From Desire to Data: How JLab’s Experimental Program Evolved Part 3: From Experimental Plans to Concrete Reality, JLab Gears Up for Research, mid-1990 through 1997 Catherine Westfall OriginalPaper 01 July 2019 Pages: 108 - 159
Making Research More Diverse: How Peripheral Members Join a Scientific Community Deepanwita Dasgupta OriginalPaper 04 June 2019 Pages: 93 - 107
Decolonizing Physics: Learning from the Periphery Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 13 June 2019 Pages: 91 - 92
What We Talk about When We Talk about Physics Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinRichard Staley Editorial 07 March 2019 Pages: 1 - 2
Sabine Hossenfelder, Lost in Math: How Beauty Leads Physics Astray, Basic Books, 2018, 304 pages, $17.99 (hardcover). Jeremy Butterfield Essay Review 11 February 2019 Pages: 63 - 86
Physical Review: From the Periphery to the Center of Physics Mahdi KhelfaouiYves Gingras OriginalPaper 11 February 2019 Pages: 23 - 42
Shifting Trends in Modern Physics, Nobel Recognition, and the Histories That We Write Mary Jo Nye OriginalPaper 11 February 2019 Pages: 3 - 22
Embattled Cooperation(s): Peaceful Atoms, Pacifist Physicists, and Partisans of Peace in the Early Cold War (1947–1957) Stefano Salvia OriginalPaper 07 February 2019 Pages: 43 - 62
Physics Is Its History Robert CreaseJoseph D. MartinPeter Pesic Editorial 10 December 2018 Pages: 315 - 317
Four Facts Everyone Ought to Know about Science: The Two-Culture Concerns of Philip W. Anderson Andrew ZhangAndrew Zangwill OriginalPaper 27 November 2018 Pages: 342 - 369
Interrogating the Legend of Einstein's “Biggest Blunder” Cormac O’RaifeartaighSimon Mitton OriginalPaper 26 November 2018 Pages: 318 - 341
On “Minor” Scientists Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinPeter Pesic Editorial 21 August 2018 Pages: 219 - 220
Fueling Peter’s Mill: Mikhail Lomonosov’s Educational Training in Russia and Germany, 1731–1741 Robert P. CreaseVladimir Shiltsev OriginalPaper 17 August 2018 Pages: 272 - 304
Ludvig Lorenz and His Non-Maxwellian Electrical Theory of Light Helge Kragh OriginalPaper 03 July 2018 Pages: 221 - 253
Celebrity Physicist: How the Press Sensationalized Einstein’s Search for a Unified Field Theory Paul Halpern OriginalPaper 26 June 2018 Pages: 254 - 271
How Pressure Became a Scalar, Not a Vector Alan Chalmers OriginalPaper 19 April 2018 Pages: 165 - 179
When Science and Politics Collide Robert P. CreaseJoseph D. MartinPeter Pesic Editorial 11 April 2018 Pages: 163 - 164
The Fiftieth Anniversary of Brookhaven National Laboratory: A Turbulent Time Peter D. Bond OriginalPaper 06 March 2018 Pages: 180 - 207
From Desire to Data: How JLab’s Experimental Program Evolved Part 2: The Painstaking Transition to Concrete Plans, Mid-1980s to 1990 Catherine Westfall OriginalPaper 16 February 2018 Pages: 43 - 123
Playing with Quantum Toys: Julian Schwinger’s Measurement Algebra and the Material Culture of Quantum Mechanics Pedagogy at Harvard in the 1960s Jean-François Gauvin OriginalPaper 07 February 2018 Pages: 8 - 42
The History and Impact of the CNO Cycles in Nuclear Astrophysics Michael Wiescher OriginalPaper 05 February 2018 Pages: 124 - 158