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Featured in Physics World

New model of ocean waves sheds fresh light on the spread of microplastic pollution

Nature is always more complicated than the models we use to describe it. Ocean waves, for example, are constantly evolving. They grow when wind transfers kinetic energy to the water’s surface. They interact with each other in highly nonlinear ways. And once the wind dies down, their internal viscosity makes them dissipate away to nothing, leaving behind a surface as flat as glass.

Highlight — Q&A with Zhaoyan Sun

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
I work in the area of polymer physics and soft matter. I started working on this research since 1999 when I was a PhD student.
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
One hot topic is the AI technique and its application in polymer and soft materials. Another topic is the glass transition in materials, especially for the colloids, polymers, and soft materials.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
For me, the most special paper to my future study was published by Pablo G. Debenedetti & Frank H. Stillinger, with the title "Supercooled liquids and the glass transition". This paper brought me to the research field of glass transition in colloidal systems. After reading that paper, I started to focus on the glass transition, and until now I am still working on the glass transition issue. Recently, my research interests change from theoretical understanding of glass transition to the prediction of Tg for polymers by using AI techniques.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
A fast decision, a deep understanding in physical problems, and also a solid editor team are all my concerns.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
Do not just show your plain data. Carefully analyze your data and use the data to tell a good story. Then your work will have more impact.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
I am also interested in chemistry, materials, and AI techniques. In addition, I like black metal, and playing basketball.

EPS Young Minds Leadership Meeting

It was a pleasure for EPL to attend the 2026 edition of the EPS Young Minds Leadership Meeting, held alongside EPS Council in Vilnius, Lithuania on 15th and 16th May. In addition to introducing participants to the peer review process adopted by journals like EPL, we helped judge the award for the best activity run by a Young Minds section over the previous year. There were many exciting activities that communicated thought-provoking ideas about physics to a broad audience. The winning entry, from the Cairo Young Minds section, had participants solving physics challenges while running a (shortened) marathon, this intended to demonstrate the process of breaking complex problems down into smaller parts, as physicists are trained to do. Congratulations to the winners!

Richard Blythe, EPL Editor-in-Chief

EPL sponsored poster prizes at MECO51

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🥇 1st Prize – Oliver Oing (University of Duisburg-Essen)

Aharonov-Bohm interferometry with interacting quantum dots

🥈 2nd Prize – Wiktor Kalinowski (St Andrews)

Quantum Quench from BEC to Hard Rods: Exact Overlaps and Correlations in Stationary State

🥉 3rd Prize – Idriss Adjaout (Institut Pascal)

Stochastic Representation of Parabolic PDE and Application to Monte Carlo Simulations

EPL sponsored poster prizes at MECO51, the 51st meeting of the Middle European Cooperation in Statistical Physics. This edition of the long-running series took place in the beautiful surroundings of the Abbey des Prémontrés on the banks of the river Moselle in Pont-à-Mousson (near Nancy, France) and brought together about 60 scientists working in the domain of statistical mechanics and condensed matter physics. After lively discussions with early career researchers in multiple poster sessions, prizes were awarded for the three best contributions and presented in the closing ceremony by EPL Deputy Editor Rosemary Harris.

EPL celebrates its 40th anniversary!

Non-collinear antiferromagnets and the anomalous Hall effect

To mark this milestone, we are revisiting highlights from the decade 2010-2019.

J. Kübler and C. Felser’s 2014 EPL Letter (2014 EPL 108 67001) proved that non-collinear antiferromagnets like Mn3Sn exhibit a large Anomalous Hall Effect despite negligible net magnetization. This discovery, rooted in topology, pioneered the field of antiferromagnetic spintronics.
 

More Highlights will follow throughout the anniversary year.

Highlight — Q&A with Galina L. Klimchitskaya

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
During the last 30 years I work on the Casimir effect and its applications in condensed matter physics, atomic physics, gravitation and cosmology, and in nanotechnology. Before that I have been working in the field of relativistic theory of atomic spectra. Investigation of the Lamb shift in multicharged ions attracted my attention to the vacuum quantum effects, the Casimir effect in that number.
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
This is the unusual response of metals to the evanescent waves with the transverse electric polarization, which turned out to be spatially nonlocal. As was demonstrated by a number of precision experiments on measuring the Casimir force, the corresponding response functions should possess the double pole at zero frequency.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
This is the experimental paper by Prof. R. S. Decca et al. (Phys. Rev. D v.68, 116003, 2003) on measuring the Casimir interaction between Au-coated surfaces, in which I was a theoretical collaborator. In that paper it was demonstrated for the first time that the description of response of gold to the low-frequency electromagnetic field by means of the commonly used Drude model leads to contradiction with the measurement data.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
I am looking for the novel physical results, clear presentation, and the accessibility for a wide readership.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
I would recommend to formulate the problem under study and the obtained results in the form clear for nonexperts in the field.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
I am fond of history, music, ballet, and travelling.

Oxford University Press to publish EPL

Driving the growth of EPL, while maintaining high quality, reputation, and impact, at the heart of new agreement.

Oxford University Press (OUP) has announced a major new agreement with the EPL Association to publish their prestigious peer-reviewed journal EPL from 1 January 2027. The journal will join OUP’s portfolio of more than 500 titles, three-quarters of which are published on behalf of learned and professional societies.

EPL is centered around the publication of original, high-quality Letters covering contemporary research topics in physics, including theory, experiment and computation. It provides authors with fast, fair and constructive peer review thanks to an Editorial Board of active scientists who are experts in their respective fields.

Speaking about the new agreement, Jennifer Paxton-Boyd, Publishing Director at OUP, said: “We are delighted to embark on a new collaboration with the EPL Association to publish their journal of essential physics research. The close alignment of the Association and OUP missions will allow us to collaboratively grow the impact, sustainability, and innovation of EPL.”

Chair of the EPL Association, Professor Petra Rudolf, added: “This partnership will build on the robust foundations that underpin EPL today. Oxford University Press shares our commitment to the standards and integrity that have long defined EPL, and we look forward to the next phase of the journal’s development to support the global physics community.”

About Oxford University Press

OUP publishes over 500 academic and research journals covering a broad range of subject areas, three-quarters of which are published in collaboration with learned societies and other international organizations. OUP has been publishing journals for more than a century and, as the world’s largest university press, has more than 500 years of publishing expertise.

EPL Partners

Europhysics Letters was founded in 1986 by the European Physical Society (EPS), the Société Française de Physique (SFP) and its subsidiary EDP Sciences, the Società Italiana di Fisica (SIF) and the Institute of Physics (IOP), with 13 European Physical Societies to form EPLA. The new journal incorporated Lettere al Nuovo Cimento and Journal de Physique Lettres and, since 2006, EPL has been published by IOPP, EPS, EDP Sciences and SIF. EPL will now be published by OUP, with the EPS continuing to provide editorial office support.

Highlight — Q&A with Alessandra Continenza

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
I am in ab-initio calculations of the electronic properties of solids. I entered this area with my Master of Science thesis work, in which I implemented a pioneering APW (Augmented Plane Wave) method for a magnetic material. Since then, I have been involved in several DFT. (Density Functional theory) further developments (GW method and DFT of superconductors) as well as implementations of the LAPW computational method, which is still one of the benchmark methods for highly precise first principles calculations.
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
I think that a very intriguing topic to investigate with care is topological matter and how topological properties could be harnessed to exploit them in innovative devices. There are still many properties that “symmetry” protected states display that are only partially understood. Understanding of these properties may change the way we are currently looking at/understanding condensed matter properties.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
To me, a real enlightening paper was the following: L.N. Oliveira, E.K.U. Gross, and W. Kohn, Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 2430 (1988) as, in its simplicity, it was able to show that it could be possible to access superconducting properties with ab-initio methods thus, from a real first-principles approach. I was a PhD student in US at that time and started working on the paper only when I was back in Italy. With other colleagues, we started a collaboration with Prof. Gross and after a few years of intense discussions and work, we were able to calculate the SC gap of MgB2 and several other materials on a completely ab-initio basis.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
I am usually looking for the innovative message of each paper. Of course, I am well aware that also applications of known methods to different materials could bring new messages and insights in our present understanding, and this is also fine. So, this is the kind of message I am looking for in EPL contributions. Routine work is of course very useful to the scientific community, as well. However, there are other journals focusing on that. EPL contributions should serve the community with new ideas and/or new insights.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
I would encourage authors to find the most innovative aspects of their work and make them very clear in their discussion. Clarity is a very important issue, together with the ability to stress the innovative message they want to convey. To make it easy reachable to general physicists is the next challenge: after all, it is true that we are all working in very different specific fields, however we should always be able to catch insights and ideas wherever they come from.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
I like to spend my little free time listening to music and reading. I also enjoy cooking for friends.

EPL supported the Conference PHOTOPTICS 2026

EPL supported the Conference PHOTOPTICS 2026 (14th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology) held in Marbella (Spain) on 06-08 March 2026. With the presence of EPL Co-Editor, Professor Maria Raposo.

PHOTOPTICS 2026 (14th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology) received 29 paper submissions from 15 countries, of which 24% were accepted and published as full papers (12 pages/25’ oral presentation). Each submission underwent a double-blind peer-review process conducted by at least two, and typically three or more, members of the International Program Committee, composed of established researchers and domain experts.
At the closing session, the conference acknowledged a few papers that were considered excellent in their class, presenting a “Best Paper Award” and a “Best Student Paper Award”. These awards were conferred to the authors indicated below:
 
Best Paper Award
Buried Graphene: Unlocking High-Performance on-Chip Near-Infrared Photodetection
Teresa Crisci, Luigi Moretti, Mariano Gioffrè, Mario Iodice, Giuseppe Coppola, Babak Hashemi, Mohammed Mammeri, Francesco Giuseppe Della Corte and Maurizio CasalinoHonorable Mention: Photonic Continuity: Sustainable Wired and Wireless Photonics from Kilobits per Second (Kbps) to Petabits per Second (Pbps)
Olivier Bouchet, Yanes Yahoui, Guillaume Vercasson, Vincent de la Broise, Irene Kolokytha and Sokratis Barmpounakis
Best Student Paper Award
Linking Air Pollution to Internal Plant Responses Using a GLCM Texture Analysis of OCT Images under Ozone Stress
Hayate Goto and Tatsuo Shiina
After a successful 2026 edition, PHOTOPTICS 2027 will be held in Valletta, Malta, from 25 to 27 of February, 2027. For more updated information, please visit the conference website 

Active and Intelligent Living Matter II

EPL supported the conference « Active and Intelligent Living Matter II », held at the Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture in Erice (Italy) on 21-26 March 2026.  This conference brought together world-leading experts from theoretical and experimental backgrounds to explore the field of intelligent and adaptive functionality in biological and artificial materials, how living systems process information and how we might replicate this in artificial systems. 
The organisers decided to award two equal prizes for best talk and two equal prizes for best poster.
Best Early-Career-Researcher Talk:
— Name: Marc Vergés Vilarrubia  – Talk title: Active Flows Control: From Isotropic to Anisotropic States with In-situ Generated Hydrogel Obstacles
— Name: Jacopo Romano – Talk title: Anomalous diffusion of a chemotactic particle in low dimensions
Best Poster:
— Name: Samuel Mueller – Poster title: Disrupting Liquid-Gas Phase Transitions With Active Doping
— Name: Lasse Bonn – Poster title: Defining fully developed active turbulence through a non-equilibrium phase transition
 
The prizes were presented to the winners by EPL Co-Editor, Dr Marco Mazza.
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EPL celebrates its 40th anniversary!

Soft matter physics helps to engineer super-slippery surfaces (and reduce the size of coffee stains!)

To mark this milestone, we are revisiting highlights from the decade 2010-2019.

The new featured paper is « Slippery pre-suffused surfaces » by A. Lafuma and D. Quéré (2011 EPL 96 56001).
 

More Highlights will follow throughout the anniversary year.

New co-editors 2026 on board !

Dr. Roelof Bijker
Dr. Roelof Bijker
Bittencourt
Dr. Victor Augusto S. V. Bittencourt
Doneva
Dr. Daniela Doneva
França
Prof. Vívian V. França
Geng
Prof. Wenping Geng
Kiely
Dr. Anthony Kiely
Menzel
Prof. Andreas Menzel
Wu
Prof. Xiaosong Wu
Yamilov
Prof. Alexey G. Yamilov

Highlight — Q&A with Mahendra K. Verma

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
Turbulence, Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
At present, I am working on spectral properties of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) and quantum turbulence. In particular, our group is focussed on resolving whether MHD turbulence follows Iroshnikov-Kraichnan 3/2 scaling or Kolmogorov's 5/3 scaling. In quantum turbulence, we are exploring thermalization in non-forced Gross-Pitaevskii equation
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
It is hard to pinpoint a single paper. However, Kolmogorov's 3 papers of 1941, and Onsager's 1949 paper are very illuminating.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
It feels good when a a major unsolved problem is solved using simple, yet powerful ideas. Of course, such works do not appear all the time. But, such works give immense pleasure.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
I suggest clear presentation, structured organization, and beautiful figures. Additionally, short and clear abstract and conclusions attract readers to a paper.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
I am fond of good movies and stories.

Highlight — Q&A with Jun Jiang

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
My research focuses on the application of ferroelectric materials in information memory, particularly utilizing domain wall structures to achieve memory functionality. Since my doctoral studies, I have been dedicated to exploring this field.
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
In the field of ferroelectric memory that I research, an important emerging direction is nanoscale memory devices based on domain wall structures. Their theoretical storage density limit has been experimentally demonstrated to reach the scale of a single unit cell. Coupled with the inherent advantages of ferroelectric materials—such as long endurance and fast switching speed—this points toward a revolutionary prospect for ultra-high-density storage. However, the true hotspot and challenge in this direction lie in breakthroughs in material systems: how to develop novel ferroelectric materials that can be integrated at low temperatures and exhibit uniformly controllable domain walls. This is not only critical for device realization but also drives progress across multiple fundamental fields, including ferroelectric physics, thin-film growth, and interface science.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
The paper "Conductive domain walls in ferroelectric BiFeO₃" (Nature Materials 8, 229–234 (2009)) reveals an innovative mechanism: binary state switching can be achieved by precisely controlling the generation and erasure of conductive domain walls themselves, rather than relying on conventional ferroelectric domain reversal. This provides a revolutionary perspective for developing next-generation high-density memory devices.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
I particularly value submissions that demonstrate rigorous and comprehensive argumentation, along with the capacity to engage the audience.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
Clearly state the significance of the work in the abstract and the early sections of the introduction, and then substantiate your argument comprehensively from multiple angles within the main body of the paper.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
In my spare time, I enjoy spending time with my family, traveling together and learning new things with them.

New Directions in Theoretical Physics 5

EPL was proud to kick off its 40th Anniversary year by sponsoring New Directions in Theoretical Physics 5, a conference held every three years at the Higgs Centre for Theoretical Physics in Edinburgh. 
Like EPL, the Higgs Centre promotes new thinking at the frontiers of all areas physics, and is a community-driven organisation. Participants at the conference heard presentations from eminent scientists on topics spanning cosmology, plasmas, fusion, turbulence, particle physics, superconductivity and biological physics. The conference was opened by the Tait Chair of Mathematical Physics, Prof Steven Tobias, and the EPL Editor-in-Chief, Prof Richard Blythe. The latter was joined by colleagues on the organising committee to judge posters presented by early career researchers, including undergraduate students, who all presented impressive and sophisticated work.
Lucy Arditi - First Prize
Reinosuke Kusano - 2nd Prize
Daniel Meikle - 3rd Prize

🥇 1st Prize – Lucy Arditi (Edinburgh)

🥈 2nd Prize – Reinosuke Kusano (St Andrews)

🥉 3rd Prize – Daniel Meikle (Edinburgh)

In memory of Bart van Tiggelen (1965-2025)

We at EPL are sad to learn of the passing of our colleague Bart van Tiggelen in December 2025. Bart had a long association with the journal, serving as a Co-Editor (editorial board member) from 2012 to 2017 and then as Editor-in-Chief from 2018 until 2021.

Although I did not have the pleasure of meeting my predecessor personally, it is clear from the tributes that we have received that Bart brought a characteristic enthusiasm, commitment and deep critical thinking to all aspects of his scientific career, including these editorial roles. He was a particularly strong advocate of the values that we hold at EPL and the place that physical societies have in supporting the research community. His reflections on the ever-changing publication landscape, published in EPN in 2019 [1], are clear, insightful and remain relevant to this day. As well as addressing the rough-and-tumble of everyday life in the editor’s chair, musing on such topics as impact factor and the ever-increasing demands on peer reviewers, Bart set out a clear vision for an ecosystem that supports the highest quality and most original science, rather than more incremental contributions that might have more immediate impact.

To this end, Bart drew on the statistical analysis of his predecessor [2], which demonstrated that a journal’s impact factor is more of a reflection of a journal’s size than quality. He pointed towards the fact that both EPL and PRL have a similar percentage of ‘evergreen’ papers, that is those that remain influential for years, if not decades. He also worked hard to raise the visibility of the journal through a wide range of initiatives [3]. “It is crucial,” Bart argued, “that physical societies keep taking the lead on scientific publishing…. It is important that they work together, without internal competition, and keep insisting on scientific quality and readability of research papers as the only criteria that count.” [1]

Bart developed this theme in a later piece, contrasting the utility of scientific approaches that generate fundamentally new ideas as opposed to refinements to theories that improve agreement with experiment in ways that do not offer deep insights [4]. Here he reflects, among other things, on his experience as EPL Editor-in-Chief in accepting a manuscript against the advice of reviewers who disagreed with the conclusion but could not spot any flaws in the argument. Such an action displays great courage. Where ideas that challenge the status quo are offered in good faith and survive the sceptical scrutiny of multiple experts, the community benefits much more from an appropriately caveated publication than suppression.

Beyond EPL, Bart was a distinguished physicist. His research on wave physics was recognised through the award of several prizes, including the Paul Langevin prize in 2004. As a Research Professor at the Institute of Physics of CNRS, Bart was in charge of theoretical and numerical physics, interdisciplinarity, training, and scientific editing.  He was a strong advocate for the free dissemination of scientific information, leading many masterclasses on open science and peer reviewing in France.  He was a deeply engaged member of the French Physical Society and a devoted administrator of EDP Sciences, whose strong personal commitment to open science and to European journals such as EPL left a lasting mark, as did his respect for the work of learned society publishers.

Reflecting on Bart’s stewardship of EPL, former EPS President Christophe Rossel commented that he had the pleasure to work and interact with Bart many times. In addition to being an enthusiastic scientist and linked to EPL, Bart is remembered as a very caring, joyful and friendly person, with Rossel commenting, “He was always ready for a good word and took the time to share his personal views. We will miss him as an excellent colleague and a good friend.”

We offer our condolences to Bart’s family, colleagues and friends. At EPL we remain committed to upholding the values of quality and integrity that he so passionately advocated.

 

Richard A. Blythe, EPL Editor-in-Chief

 

With thanks to Giorgio Benedek, Agnès Henri and Christophe Rossel for sharing their memories of Bart with me.

 

[1] B. van Tiggelen (2019) EPL in an eventful environment. EPN 50/3:20

[2] G. Benedek, G. Watt and F. Burr (2017) EPS Activity report 2016. pp18-21

[3] B. van Tiggelen, G. Benedek, I. Trotter, F. Burr (2018) EPS Activity report 2017. pp 15-16

[4] B. van Tiggelen (2024) My experiment agrees with the theory! EPN 55/1:29

Featured in Physics World

Reinforcement learning could help airborne wind energy take off

When people think of wind energy, they usually think of windmill-like turbines dotted among hills or lined up on offshore platforms. But there is also another kind of wind energy, one that replaces stationary, earthbound generators with tethered kites that harvest energy as they soar through the sky.

Highlight — Q&A with Sabine H.L. Klapp

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
My current area of research is statistical physics, with a focus on soft and active matter. I did my first steps in this direction during my master thesis on phase transitions in disordered Potts models.
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
Active matter, nonreciprocal systems, stochastic thermodynamics, control of nonequilibrium systems.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
After my PhD on equilibrium phase transitions in fluids, a very influential paper for me was that by A. J. Archer and R. Evans, J. Chem. Phys. 121, 4246–4254 (2004) that showed how to derive a classical density functional theory for the dynamics of colloidal fluids. Some papers that were crucial for the recent research in my group, are those of Wesink et al., PNAS 109 (36) 14308 (2012) because it brought up a coarse-grained description of active turbulence, U. Seifert, Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 040602 (2005) on entropy production in stochastic systems, and, most recently, the work of Fruchart et al. (Nature 592 (2021)) on nonreciprocal systems.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
The paper should describe a nice story with new results, whose impact should be clear and understandable for a broader community.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
The paper should be written clearly and, if possible, it should address a broader research community (especially regarding the relevance of the main results and their embedding to the literature).
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
Music (I am playing violin), running, hiking.

EPL is now on LinkedIn !

EPL has a forty-year track record of publishing research letters at the frontiers of physics. It is a unique enterprise, owned by national physical societies across Europe and its umbrella organisation, the European Physical Society. Its entire editorial board are practising research physicists, all abreast of the latest developments in their field, and with a keen eye for original and stimulating contributions. The journal’s primary mission is to serve the physics research community, prioritising rigour, quality and fairness.

In pursuing these goals, we have, over the years, established a network of physics research and publishing expertise across Europe and beyond. We invite you to join us through this platform, which will keep you updated with the latest developments and also give you a chance to interact with the journal’s editors and staff more informally than the standard publication process allows. We look forward to lively conversations on physics research, publishing trends or any other topic of interest across our community. Please share with anyone you think might be interested.

Professor Richard A. Blythe
EPL Editor-in-Chief

A simple stochastic theory of extinction shows rapid elimination of a Sars-like pandemic

In a new Physics World feature, EPL author Bhavin S. Khatri explains how a straightforward mathematical model uncovers the conditions for rapid eradication, highlighting infection thresholds, immunity regimes, and why early global action might have ended COVID-19 by 2021.

Explore the full Physics World feature and read the original EPL article for deeper insights into the science behind pandemic extinction.

Highlight — Q&A with Frank K. Wilhelm-Mauch

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?
I work on theoretical aspecs of quantum computing. I could never decide if I want to understand non-intuitive theories or build things. Now I do both!
2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?
We can now keep quantum information coherent in a big complex system longer than in any of its components, thanks to quantum error correction that has been practically demonstrated.
3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it
When David DiVincenzo wrote about a list of requirements for quantum computing hardware, I understood what it takes to get into the field and it actually also succinctly summarized a lot of other, more theoretical work.
4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?
A clear message that advances physics - founded on solid work.
5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?
Figures say more than a thousand words - but if you need words, really focus them on results rather than activity.
6. What interests do you have outside of physics?
Cycling! I also try to learn to play the guitar.

Highlight — Q&A with Xi Lin

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?

My research focuses on quantum transport measurements and the development of experimental techniques at ultra-low temperatures. I became interested in this field during my undergraduate studies, when my advisor offered me the opportunity to participate in low temperature experiments, which I found particularly fascinating.

2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?

I believe that unexpected discoveries might hold greater interests.

3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it

One influential paper was “Specific heat and phonon dispersion of liquid 4He” by Dennis S. Greywall (PRB 18, 2127, (1978)). It demonstrated how an experiment can be properly designed and carried out.

4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?

For experimental manuscripts, the most essential quality is data validity, while for theoretical ones, it is creativity..

5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?

I wish I knew the perfect answer.

6. What interests do you have outside of physics?

Outside of physics, I enjoy reading and sleeping, and I also used to play soccer.

Highlight — Q&A with Andrey A. Chabanov

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?

Electromagnetic wave propagation in complex media, Anderson localization, photonic crystals, and magnetooptics. My research interests have developed during my doctoral studies, postdoctoral training, and through collaborative research projects.

2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?

Magnetic metamaterials with zero net magnetization. These materials do not produce demagnetizing or stray fields, which can greatly improve their performance in nonreciprocal electromagnetic devices and applications with stringent requirements regarding the magnetic field environment.

3. Tell us about a research paper that had a big influence on your work and what was so special about it

“Localization of light in a disordered medium” published in 1997 by Diederik Wiersma and colleagues. It resonated within the mesoscopic physics and statistical optics communities, igniting further exploration of Anderson localization.

4. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?

The originality of the submitted research, its potential to push the boundaries of physics, and its ability to inspire further investigation.

5. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?

Make your paper a clear and engaging story. Consider who might benefit from your work and connect it to their research.

6. What interests do you have outside of physics?

I enjoy traveling to new places, watching sports, and listening to classical music.

Best poster awards at “Workshop on Frontiers in Quantum Materials” (ICTP-SAIFR)

EPL was present at the “Workshop on Frontiers in Quantum Materials” (https://www.ictp-saifr.org/wfqm2025/) held in São Paulo, Brazil at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics – South American Institute for Fundamental Research (ICTP-SAIFR) from September 1 – 5 2025.
 
A total of 34 posters were presented at the workshop and the committee had a tough work to select the three winners, due to the overall high quality of the research presented.
 
Congratulations to Nicoly, Maria, and Valéria!

A committee composed of six researchers from Brazil and abroad has elected the following students to receive EPL best poster awards:

🥇 1st Prize – Nicoly Hembeck (Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil) – With Eric Andrade (USP, Brazil) and Maria Carolina De Oliveira Aguiar (EPL Co-Editor)

“Study of possible multipolar ordering in heavy fermion systems”

🥈 2nd Prize – Maria Vitória Tiago Inocêncio (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil) – With Eric Andrade (USP, Brazil) and Maria Carolina De Oliveira Aguiar (EPL Co-Editor)

“Formation of Charge and Spin Ordering: Temporal Evolution After Quenches in One-Dimensional Interacting Systems”

🥉 3rd Prize – Valéria Mariani Mattiello (Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil) – With Eric Andrade (USP, Brazil) and Maria Carolina De Oliveira Aguiar (EPL Co-Editor)

“Theory of a nematic phase of a heavy fermion compound: symmetry breaking in the hybridization channel”

Highlight — Q&A with Hui Khoon Ng

Co‑Editor — EPL

1. What area of physics do you work in and how did you get into it?

I am in quantum computing, i.e., how to use quantum mechanics to solve computational problems. My specific area of focus is in quantum error correction and fault-tolerant quantum computing that ensures the quantum devices we build from noisy components can compute accurately despite of imperfections unavoidable in real devices. How did I get into it? I happened to sign up for a quantum computing course by David Mermin in Cornell - I was there for my undergraduate studies. I don’t even remember really why I signed up; probably the course description had looked interesting and I didn’t know anything about the subject. This was 2002/2003, still in the early years of the field. Mermin was decidedly inspiring and there were clearly very many curious questions left open. I was at that point considering PhD studies, and this looked like a good area to get into. Plus, I was on a government scholarship from Singapore, and had to eventually return there to work. There was already interest in quantum computing then in Singapore, so going into it for PhD made a lot of sense.

2. What hot new topic in your research area should all physicists be told about?

For the past two/three years, there has been very rapid progress in implementing error correction in quantum computing devices that actually helps reduce the computational error rates. This is a huge milestone for the field. Error correction requires increased complexity in the computational operations to be able to remove errors. This means that the error rate per component must be below a certain level before the overall more complex error-corrected computation can remove, not add, errors - this is the concept of the fault-tolerance noise threshold that all devices have to get below before error correction actually works. For the longest time, devices were simply not good enough; it is only in the couple of years that we saw signs of crossing that threshold.

It’s still not easy though - majority of quantum computing devices in the lab today are still unable to effectively implement error correction for various reasons. There is thus still a lot more room for research. It is clear that error-corrected quantum computation has to become significantly more easy to realise before we can expect quantum computers to fulfil its potential as a useful computational tool.

3. What particular qualities are you looking for in a submission to EPL?

Because EPL is a letter journal, I look especially for relevance and accessibility to a broad audience, in the scientific content as well as the writing itself. Of course, “broad” here does not refer to “all of physics”, which covers too wide a spectrum these days for any paper to reasonably reach. Instead, I look for relevance and accessibility to the whole sub-field of physics. Take my field of quantum computing, for example. If I cannot see how a submission is of general interest to people in quantum computing, it just doesn’t belong in EPL. A specific paper that deals with, say, experimental techniques in neutral-atom devices would have a better fit in a more technical, more targetted journal than the broad-audience EPL.

4. What tips would you give to authors so that their work has the biggest impact?

When writing the paper, think of a target audience beyond your immediate peers/collaborators. This applies not just to papers targeting broad-audience journals (see my previous point), but also for those bound for technical journals. Writing a paper that has impact is all about reaching readers beyond your own network of collaborators; your own network would likely have already heard about the results from your talks or through private discussions. I sometimes see manuscripts that read as if they are notes written for themselves, or for close collaborators who already know the subject; those are just not likely to be impactful beyond that very narrow circle. Instead, take the effort to explain, in as simple terms as you can manage, what you have done, and why it is important even to topic-adjacent readers, so that you can broaden your reach and enhance your work’s impact.

5. What interests do you have outside of physics?

These days, with a young child at home, I have little time for much else outside of work other than reading. I do read a lot, though, and primarily fiction. I don’t have a specific genre that I read, though, like many scientists, I read a lot of sci-fi and fantasy books. But I try to mix it up and get a wide variety. That variety, and the fictional setting, I do think is important for any scientist - it really is true that one gets the best ideas when doing something entirely irrelevant to one’s research area!

A conversation about theoretical ecology with physicists Ada Altieri and Silvia De Monte

This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast is a conversation with two physicists, Ada Altieri and Silvia De Monte, who are using their expertise in statistical physics to understand the behaviour of ecological communities.

StatPhys in Kigali - INFN Sezione di Padova

For the first time ever a StatPhys satellite meeting was hosted in Africa. From an interdisciplinary perspective, this on-site meeting aimed at joining together African and International scientific communities in statistical physics, data science, nonlinear dynamics, and related applications, to provide ground for reciprocal knowledge and cross-fertilization.
 
The goal of the meeting was to bring together scientists from a broad range of fields, willing to exchange their experience in dealing with both fundamental and applicative problems.  As part of the meeting, a two-day intense school of complex systems was held to encourage students’ participation at the meeting. 
 
EPL was delighted to sponsor three best poster prizes which were presented to the winners by EPL Deputy Editor, Dr Rosemary Harris.

🥇 1st Prize – Carmel LAMBU TATSA
(University of Dschang, Cameroon)

“Delayed swarmalator system in fluidic environment”

🥈 2nd Prize – Nelly Ariane DONFACK TSAGN
(University of Yaounde I, Cameroon)

“Numerical and analytical transport of Brownian particles in corrugated deformable channels”

🥉 3rd Prize – Chenceline FOUEDJI EPSE LEKEUFACK
(University of Yaounde I, Cameroon)

🧬“Multisolitons-like patterns in a one-dimensional MARCKS protein cyclic model”

Workshop 'Complex Flows and Complex Fluids' - Best oral presentations by Early Career Scientists

From left to right: Dr. Francesca Pelusi (awardee), Dr. Michele Buzzicotti (jury), Dr. Xander de Wit (awardee), Prof. Michael Wilczek (jury), and Dr. Aurore Loisy (jury).

EPL supported the Workshop ‘Complex Flows and Complex Fluids‘ (https://biferale.web.roma2.infn.it/ComplexFlowsComplexFluids/) held in Rome, 8-11 July 2025, satellite meeting of StatPhys29(https://statphys29.org/) taking place in Florence, 13-18 July 2025.EPL awarded a 200€ prize each for the two best oral presentations by Early Career Scientists.

There were 28 eligible candidates, and hence it was not an easy task for the Committee members, Dr. Aurore Loisy (IRPHE, Marseille, FRANCE), Dr. Michele Buzzicotti (Dept. Physics, Univ. Tor Vergata, Rome, ITALY) and Prof. Michael Wilczek (University of Bayreuth, Germany).

Based on the excellence of the scientific content, delivery and discussion, the Committee awarded Xander de Wit (Technical University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands) and Francesca Pelusi (CNR IAC, Rome, Italy).
 
Congratulations Xander and Francesca!
 
Awardees also received a voucher for a free open-access publication on EPL: we look forward to receiving their submissions!
 
Dynamical homogenization in effective loop quantum cosmology
Physics World recently featured an article discussing groundbreaking research published in EPL, exploring how loop quantum cosmology may help explain the remarkable uniformity of the cosmic microwave background.
This study is authored by one of EPL’s editors, underscoring the journal’s continuing contribution to high-impact physics research.

EPL sponsors the Young Minds Best Activity Prize

EPL was present at the 13th Young Minds Leadership Meeting and awarded two 250€ prizes to the YM Sections with the best activity of the year! All Sections of the Young Minds Programme conducted extraordinary activities during past year and we would like to praise their work across Europe and abroad. However, only two Sections could win our EPL Best Activity Award and the winners are…

Milan YMs and Yerevan YMs!
To celebrate the International Day of Light, Milan YM hosted an event at Politecnico di Milano combining science and creativity. After discussing gravitational waves and VIRGO detector, participants built simple interferometers using LEGO bricks, offering a fun and hands-on way to explore big physics ideas.

Meanwhile, Yerevan YM gathered over 500 people across Armenia for science and stargazing in Jermuk. Participants enjoyed telescope sessions, science talks, and cultural shows during the Perseid meteor shower. Visitors also explored fun physics experiments and learned about space and the universe from top scientists.

We would like to thank all the Young Minds Programme for the incredible work they do all across Europe.

The Young Minds winners together with Vijala Kiruvanayagam, Executive Editor of EPL:

🏆 Siranush Asatryan (Yerevan)

🏅 Marco da Ros and Francesco di Pasquale (Milan)

✒️ Vijala Kiruvanayagam (Executive Editor, EPL)

The Young Minds winners with Anne Grigoryan, Young Minds representative:

🌍 Anne Grigoryan

🏆 Siranush Asatryan (Yerevan)

🏅 Marco da Ros and Francesco di Pasquale (Milan)

Full group photo with the Young Minds team:

🌍  Anne Grigoryan

🏆 Siranush Asatryan (Yerevan)

🏅 Marco da Ros and Francesco di Pasquale (Milan)

✒️ Vijala Kiruvanayagam (Executive Editor, EPL)

Editorial Board Meeting in Mulhouse, May 2025

Members of EPL’s editorial board met on May 22nd 2025 at the EPS Editorial Office in Mulhouse, France, to discuss the journal’s strategic direction. The board, composed of practising researchers, emphasised the importance of maintaining high standards, supporting authors and reviewers, and upholding the journal’s values as a community-led journal with easy routes to open-access publication.

EPL Poster Prizes at the Quantum 2025 Conference: From Foundations of Quantum Mechanics to Quantum Information and Quantum Metrology & Sensing

The Quantum 2025 conference, held in memory of Carlo Novero, is a biannual event that began around 20 years ago and has become a reference point in the fields of quantum foundations, quantum optics, and, more recently, quantum technologies. The latest edition took place in Torino from May 18 to May 23, 2025, bringing together leading scientists and early-career researchers from around the world. The rich program of invited and contributed talks, as well as poster presentations, allowed for an active participation and a lively scientific exchange of a large number of physicists.

EPL awarded three prizes to poster presentations by early-career researchers, selected by a committee of experts.

📄 Mathias Van Regemortel

🏛️ Hewlett Packard Labs, Brussels, Belgium

📄 Greta Andrini

🏛️ INFN, Torino, Italy

📄 Alberto Paniate

🏛️ INRIM, Torino, Italy

Explore EPL’s Highlights of 2024

25 articles on topics such as condensed matter physics, network physics, complex systems, black hole physics, many-body quantum systems, quantum information and amorphous topological matter.

https://iopscience.iop.org/journal/0295-5075/page/highlights-of-2024

EPL Poster Prizes at the Argentinian-German WE-Heraeus Seminar

Correlations and Dynamics in Low-Dimensional Quantum Systems

The Argentinian-German WE-Heraeus Seminar recently concluded after a week of scientific exchange focused on correlations and dynamics in low-dimensional quantum systems. Held from March 23 to March 29, 2025, in San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina, the meeting brought together leading scientists and early-career researchers from both Argentina and Germany. The seminar was generously supported by the Wilhelm and Else Heraeus Foundation, Germany’s most prominent private institution funding physics research and education.

The seminar offered an intense and immersive week of scientific exchange focused on topics such as topological quantum matter, quantum spin liquids, Floquet dynamics, and superconducting quantum circuits. The program promoted in-depth discussions through a combination of invited lectures, poster presentations, and dedicated discussion sessions.

EPL awarded three poster prizes to recognize outstanding contributions by early-career researchers.

📌 Lucila Peralta Gavensky (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)
📝 Poster Title: “The Středa Formula for Floquet Systems”

📌 Julia Besproswanny (University of Wuppertal, Germany)
📝 Poster Title: “Topological Fermi Arcs and Surface Superconductivity in t-PtBi₂”

📌 Gonzalo Alfredo Mogensen (Instituto Balseiro, Argentina)
📝 Poster Title: “Near 2D limit in FeSe by single crystal exfoliation”

New co-editors 2025 on board !

Johannes Aichele
Roberta Arnaldi
Job Beckers
Job Beckers
Zhoujian Cao
Jorge I. Facio
Jorge I. Facio
Jhon W. González Salazar
Daniela Grasso
Daniela Grasso
Giulia Gubitosi
Rongying Jin
Marco G. Mazza
Anna Minguzzi
Anna Minguzzi
Eduardo Miranda
Eduardo Miranda
Izaak Neri
Daniele Oriti
Daniele Oriti
Mathis Plapp
Mathis Plapp
Dragana Popović
Dragana Popović
Tanja Schilling
Gonzalo Usaj
Tie-Jun Wang
Edward Wilson-Ewing
Yi Zhang

Announcing the appointment of the new Editor-in-Chief of EPL

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Richard Blythe as EPL’s Editor-in-Chief, starting on 1 May 2024. Professor Blythe holds a personal chair in complex systems at the University of Edinburgh, UK. He studied Physics at the University of Bristol, UK, participating in an exchange year at the Technische Hochschule Darmstadt, Germany, before pursuing a PhD in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics at Edinburgh. The EPL Association warmly thanks Professor Alessandra Lanotte who is acting as Editor in Chief from 1 January until 30 April.

New co-editors 2024 on board !

Matilda Backholm
Matilda Backholm
Adriano Barra
Sebastian Deffner

Explore EPL’s Highlights of 2023

 40 articles on topics such as condensed matter physics, network physics, complex systems, black hole physics, many-body quantum systems, quantum information and amorphous topological matter.

https://iopscience.iop.org/journal/0295-5075/page/highlights-of-2023

New co-editors 2023 on board !

Matheus Araújo Marques
Mariam Bouhmadi López
Maria Carolina de Oliveira Aguiar
Laura Fanfarillo
Elena González Ferreiro
Andreas Hermann
Yun Lai
María Rosa López Gonzalo
Dmitri Melikhov
Jae Dong Noh
Maria Raposo
Andreas Ruschhaupt
Elena Santopinto
Irene Tamborra
Gianmassimo Tasinato
Bassano Vacchini
Chengyin Wu

New co-editors 2022 on board !

Celia Anteneodo
Valerio Capraro
Sakuntala Chatterjee
Fernando Delgado
Marie-Christine Firpo
Tomasz Kapitaniak
István Kovács
Francisco A. Rodrigues
Zhaoyan Sun
Dirk-Jan Van Manen
Patrizia Vignolo
Zhili Xiao

Highlights 2020

The Highlights of 2020 collection showcases just some of the excellent work published in EPL last year – on the basis of citations, board member recommendations, and downloads.

All of the articles featured in the collection are free to read until 31 December 2021.

Highlights 2019

The Highlights of 2019 collection
showcases just some of the excellent work published in EPL last year –
on the basis of citations, board member recommendations, and downloads.

All of the articles featured in the collection are free to read until 31 December 2020.

Editorial Board Meeting in Lyon, June 2018

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Copyright© 2025 – EPL Association

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Submission to publication: 73 days

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fax: +33 389 32 94 49

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Copyright© 2025 – EPL Association