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Posted By Administration,
Monday 24 March 2025
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Posted By Administration,
Monday 24 March 2025
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Author: Dina Izadi
Art an Amazing Fact in Science
Integrating art and imaginative methods into science education can
enhance conceptual understanding in a variety of ways. Creative
activities can spark curiosity and wonder and lead to deeper exploration
of science topics that reveal students’ understanding beyond
traditional tests. Students learn to think outside the box, explore
different perspectives, and find innovative solutions, which are
essential in scientific inquiry. Art-based science projects often
involve collaboration, fostering teamwork, and communication skills that
lead to deeper and more meaningful understanding.
The book Art an Amazing Fact in Science is the second book related to the IYPT Physics Competition which was published by the Ariaian Young Innovative Minds Institute,
after the IYPT Proceeding 2010-2011. This book is a collection of
physics problem solutions from various IYPT tournaments that combine
science, art, and creativity: https://heyzine.com/flip-book/79055176c1.html
Reducing the Gap Between Science and Art, Creating Opportunities for Social Activities
This is a link to find our several festivals and after introducing
ISAC (Imagination in Science by Art in different Cultures) in two
previous years now we have started our new event as ISAC Talk festival .
We are going come together to hold various events in ISAC
(Imagination in Science by Art in different Cultures) Talk Community
which are useful in explaining scientific concepts by art especially
when those concepts are complex. Community holds festival in different
categories. By combining art and science, we can create powerful
learning experiences that foster curiosity, understanding, and
appreciation for the world around us.
Ariaian Young Innovative Minds Institute (AYIMI) and ADIB Science and Technology Institute (ADIB)
jointly in Iran, are the main organisers of this event. There are
several working groups from different countries who will join us and the
main aim of this event is giving annual grants to students who needs to
participate in tournaments, conferences, etc.
All related information and the rules are on our website: https://ayimi.org/en/
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Posted By Administration,
Monday 24 March 2025
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Statement by the Executive Committee of the European Physical Society
24th March 2025
The European Physical Society (EPS) has the mission to advocate and
promote physics research and its contributions to the economic,
technological, social and cultural advancement in Europe. As a
federation of more than 40 National Physical Societies, the EPS engages
in activities that strengthen ties among the physicists in Europe, in
physics research, science policy and education. The EPS designs and
implements programmes to develop the European physics community. It
provides a forum to share best practices to promote physics, and thus
support international collaboration and physicists worldwide.
Fostering
diversity and inclusion in the physics community is a core component of
the European Physical Society's mission. We thus firmly believe that
diversity in perspectives, backgrounds, and experiences is essential for
driving innovation, creativity, and excellence in physics and all
related issues.
Our constitution emphasizes the importance of
providing equal opportunities for all individuals, regardless of gender,
race, ethnicity, age, disability, or socioeconomic background.
By
encouraging a diverse and inclusive environment, we can help to ensure
that the brightest minds from all walks of life are given the
opportunity to contribute to the advancement of science. We are
committed to creating a supportive and respectful atmosphere where
everyone feels valued and encouraged to reach their full potential. This
commitment extends to our policies, programmes, and practices designed
to promote equity, eliminate barriers, and support the professional
growth of underrepresented groups.
Because the EPS represents the
whole European physics community, we stand united in our resolve to
cultivate a culture of respect, collaboration, and mutual support.
Diversity strengthens our society and we remain dedicated to building a
more inclusive and equitable future for all members of the EPS and the
wider scientific community.
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Posted By Administration,
Monday 24 March 2025
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We are delighted to see the early signs of spring returning
here in Les Ulis, Paris. Here we share a few updates regarding recent
conferences, and a shift in our social media presence towards platforms
that support our values of professionalism, transparency, and
community-driven dialogue.
From Strangeness in Quark Matter to Nuclear Chemistry for Sustainable
Fuel Cycles : EPJ Web of Conferences publishes two notable proceedings
from French events
“SQM 2024 – The 21st International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter was held in Strasbourg, France, June 3-7, 2024
This 2024 edition marked the 21st in the series and was
held in France for the first time. It was also the first fully
“in-person” edition since the pandemic. A total of 280 participants from
26 countries convened at the Palais de la Musique et des Congrès in
Strasbourg to discuss recent experimental and theoretical advancements
during a week-long programme including 210 oral and poster
presentations.
The focus of the Strangeness in Quark Matter Conference is on the
role of the strange and heavy-flavour quarks in the field of
ultra–relativistic nucleus–nucleus collisions, Quark Gluon Plasma
physics and in astrophysical phenomena. Specific time is devoted to open
questions and new developments as well as lectures dedicated to
graduate students and young scientists.”
If this EPJ Highlight has piqued your interest, you can read the full proceedings in open access now.
B.
Hippolyte (chair), C. Cheshkov, R. Guernane and A. Maire (Eds.), 21st
International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM 2024),
Strasbourg, France, June 3-7, 2024, EPJ Web of Conferences 316 (2025)
Organised by the French Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et
aux énergies alternatives (CEA), the 6th International ATALANTE
Conference on Nuclear Chemistry for Sustainable Fuel Cycles
(ATALANTE-2024) was held in Avignon, France, Sept 1-6 2024
The event explored “subjects and issues that cover almost all the
fields of the nuclear chemistry related to the nuclear fuel cycles:
- Actinide and fission product chemistry
- Uranium ore processing and purification
- Actinide separation
- Pyrochemistry and chemistry for molten salt reactor
- Actinide material & fuel fabrication
- Waste conditioning and long-term evolution
- Nuclear chemistry for geological repository
- Safeguards and analytical developments”
The full proceedings can be read in open access now.
P.
Guilbaud (Ed.), 6th International ATALANTE Conference on Nuclear
Chemistry for Sustainable Fuel Cycles (ATALANTE-2024), Avignon, France,
September 1-6, 2024, EPJ Web of Conferences 317 (2025)
Nurting community dialogue on social media
EPL is now on Bluesky
Please follow https://bsky.app/profile/epljournal.bsky.socialfor the latest news and articles, including Free-to-Read Editor’s Choice and Perspectives.
EDP Sciences leaves Twitter/X
The academic world is changing, and so are we. On 31st
January 2025, EDP Sciences left Twitter/X as part of the #HelloQuitX
movement, in favour of prioritising platforms that support our values.
This decision reflects our commitment to professionalism, transparency,
and community-driven dialogue. Follow us on LinkedIn, BlueSky, and our website for the latest updates.
Perpetual access to digital archives
We would like to take the opportunity to remind you that value is
still being found in our digital archive collections, and that purchase
of these gives perpetual access to this valuable science.
Journal de Physique digital archives (1872 to 1997)
We were delighted to conduct research in 2024 and discover that many articles in the Journal de Physique
archives are still being cited today. The collection includes research
from pioneers in physics, including Nobel laureates such as Marie Curie
and Louis de Broglie, both of whom were instrumental in founding EDP
Sciences in 1920.
Discover the Journal de Physique archives, including the most cited articles in the collection.
Annales de Physique digital archives (1914 to 2009)
For many years, Alain Aspect, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2022, was the Editor in Chief of the Annales de Physique. This
collection now forms part of the archive of The European Physical
Journal (EPJ), an ongoing series of peer-reviewed journals covering the
whole spectrum of physics and related interdisciplinary subjects.
Learn more about the Annales de Physique archives.
Tags:
EDP Sciences
publication
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Posted By Administration,
Friday 14 March 2025
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EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize 2025
OBJECT: The EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize recognises
outstanding research contributions in the area of statistical physics,
nonlinear physics, complex systems, complex networks.
CANDIDATES: One or two persons that have made independent or convergent
ground-breaking and agenda-setting contributions for the development of
the field. Prize winners can have any nationality.
NOMINATIONS: Self nominations will not be considered. The nominators
must send an email attaching a letter with a brief description of the
most important research contributions of the candidate and a list of up
to 6 key publications (maximum 2 pages) to the Chair of the board
Raffaella Burioni (raffaella.burioni@unipr.it) with the subject header
"EPS-SNPD award nomination". We encourage nominations of scientists from
groups currently underrepresented in Statistical and Nonlinear Physics.
DEADLINE: 30th May 2025
EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Early Career Prize 2025
OBJECT: The EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Early Career Prize
recognises outstanding research contributions in the area of statistical
physics, nonlinear physics, complex systems, complex networks.
CANDIDATES: One or two persons in their early career stage (defined as
having obtained the PhD degree less than 6 years ago at the time of
nomination) that have made independent or convergent ground-breaking
contributions for the development of the field. Prize winners can have
any nationality.
NOMINATIONS: Self nominations will not be considered. The nominators
must send an email attaching a letter with a brief description of the
most important research contributions of the candidate and a list of up
to 6 key publications (maximum 2 pages) to the Chair of the board
Raffaella Burioni (raffaella.burioni@unipr.it) with the subject header
"EPS-SNPD award nomination". We encourage nominations of scientists from
groups currently underrepresented in Statistical and Nonlinear Physics.
DEADLINE: 30th May 2025
Further information is available on the website of the Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Division of the EPS: https://www.eps.org/members/group.aspx?id=85204
Tags:
call
early career
EPS SNPD
EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Division
prize
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 25 February 2025
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Author: Alessandra Fantoni
Dear EPS Member,
Nomination is open for 2 (two) new ordinary board members of the EPS Nuclear Physics Division (EPS-NPD).
The
members of the Board are expected to attend Board meetings, which take
place twice a year. Please note that the newly elected board members
will be invited at the board meeting planned on May 8th-9th at Catania
(details will be mailed in due course).
Some of the activities of the NPD are the following:
- Organisation of the European Nuclear Physics Conference series,
- Organisation of the Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics Conference series,
- Organizazion of the Applied Nuclear Physics Conference series,
- Awarding three prestigious prizes: Lise Meitner Prize, Applied Nuclear Physics Prize and PhD Thesis Prize.
The board produces
publications on various nuclear physics related topics, for example so
called EPS Position Papers and provides input to the EPS on issues
related to nuclear physics and relations to other European and
international bodies interested in nuclear physics and policy.
For more information, you may visit the NPD website.
http://www.eps.org/?page=npd
For a nomination to be valid:
-
the nomination has to be supported by two other Individual Members.
They may either sign the nomination form or send a support letter
independently by email.
- it must be accompanied by a statement of consent from the nominee
- the elected candidate must be or become an EPS Individual Member (https://www.eps.org/general/register_member_type.asp? )
- the nominee must send a short CV in pdf or .doc format
- the nominee must send a half page candidate/campaign statement (length ½ page)
- it must be received at the EPS secretariat by 30th April 2025.
Please send it by e-mail to the two following addresses:
secretariat@eps.org and raquel.crespo@tecnico.ulisboa.pt
Alessandra Fantoni, chair of the EPS nuclear Physics Division
Tags:
elections
EPS NPD
EPS Nuclear Physics Division
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Posted By Administration,
Monday 24 February 2025
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You will find below the activities of the members of the EPS Executive Committee and of the EPS Staff.
January
9th January: Alessandra Fantoni had an online meeting of the EPS Nuclear Physics Division with:
- elections of scientific secretary
- elections of NPD chair elect
- selection of the 2024 Lise Meitner winners
In January, Karin Zach organised and participated in a meeting between the EPS and
DPG presidents with the presidents or representatives of 14 EPS member
societies, which took place on the occasion of the opening of the German
activities for the International Quantum Year in Berlin.
Members of the EPS Executive Committee:
Mairi Sakellariadou
(EPS President), Luc Bergé (EPS Past-President), Anne Pawsey (EPS Secretary General), Karin Zach, Anna
Lipniacka, Andreas Schopper, Katharina Lorenz, Christian
Beck, Alessandra Fantoni, Stuart Palmer, Anna Di Ciaccio, Eugenio
Coccia, Ian
Bearden and Roberta Caruso.
Members of the EPS Staff:
Anne Pawsey (EPS Secretary General), Xavier de Araujo,
Milan Milicevic, Ophélia Fornari (working with Sophie Baumann), Chahira
Boudeliou, Gina Gunaratnam, Ahmed Ouarab, Jean-François Kammerlocher and
Amy Guibal (currently replacing Adriana Zerafa.)
Members of the EPL Staff:
Frédéric Burr (EPL Staff Editor), Kevin Desse and Tomy Zede.
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Posted By Administration,
Friday 14 February 2025
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Author: Anne Pawsey
The United Nations has proclaimed 2025 as the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology in recognition of the 100th anniversary of the birth of modern quantum mechanics — the theory that describes the behaviour of matter and energy at atomic and subatomic scales. The international year was launched on the 4th February 2025 with an event at UNESCO headquarters in Paris. With over 1000 participants the event brought together scientists, industrialists, students and members of the physics and quantum community. The EPS president attended alongside the presidents of the German, French and UK physical societies. Attendees heard from Nobel laurates Anne L’Huillier, Bill Philips, Alain Aspect and Serge Haroche, they were treated to discussions on the importance of quantum science for sustainable development, education in quantum fields and the current state of the quantum industrial sector.
The EPS is a participating partner in the International Year of Quantum Science and Technologies and we are looking forward to events throughout the year. In April we will inaugurate the City of Göttingen as an EPS historic site. We are preparing a special issue of EPN on quantum science and technology and we are looking forward to the many and varied events which our member societies have planned throughout the year. These range from quantum games and even an escape room organised by the German and Swiss Physical societies, exhibitions of quantum science held at London’s Royal Society and la Palais de la Découverte in Paris. Publications highlighting historic journal articles from the Italian Physical Society and in Physics World, summer schools for undergraduate and post graduate students held in Lithuania and Moldova, France and Italy, plus events focused on Policy Makers in held not only Brussels but also in Poland. Finally, we should not forget education, many of our members are creating educational resources in their country’s languages, so that the fascinating topic of quantum science is accessible to everyone.

FLTR: Doris Reiter, Karin Zach, Claus Lämmerzahl, Mairi Sakellariadou, Klaus
Richter, Bernhard Nunner, Wiebke Schuppe und Dieter Meschede
Image credit: DPG
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday 13 February 2025
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Author: Ariane Wenger
A thorough understanding of attendees and their specific needs is
crucial for designing conferences that are both relevant and effective.
Thus, in summer 2024, we conducted a survey on researchers’ perceptions
of and expectations towards scientific conferences. The survey was also
distributed to the European Physical Society, and you might have
participated in it (see previous article). Thank you very much for your contribution!
Survey
participants considered scientific conferences useful and important. In
particular, participants expected to explore research objectives and
network at their next planned conference. Participants’ expectations of
what to gain at their next planned conference largely did not differ
between conference formats. The only exception were participants’
networking expectations, as virtual participants had lower expectations
to network than in-person participants (Figure 1). Based on this, it can
be argued that differences between in-person conferences and
alternative formats become marginal once virtual and hybrid conferences
can enable effective networking.

Figure 1. Participants expectations of what to gain at conferences
The
variables were measured on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly
disagree) to 7 (strongly agree). Dots represent means and error bars
represent 95% confidence intervals. The five factors were measured with
three to six items. Significant differences between in-person and
virtual participants are marked with a *.
Participants’ conference
expectations differed based on individual characteristics, such as
career stage, geographical context, and personal circumstances,
revealing that not all researchers need the same of conferences. Networking
was the only factor that all participants expected to benefit from,
highlighting that this is universally valued across all researchers and
career stages.
Early-career researchers had higher expectations regarding acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to senior researchers. Simultaneously, researchers from the Global South had higher expectations to acquire general information, explore research objectives and secure scientific follow-up opportunities
compared to their researchers from the Global North. Furthermore,
disadvantaged researchers (defined as those facing challenges with visa
restrictions, childcare responsibilities, funding, and disabilities) had
higher expectations for acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to more privileged researchers. This
highlights that researchers who are typically underrepresented and
disadvantaged in traditional in-person conferences often stand to
benefit the most from attending, as they pursue outcomes that go beyond
networking.
Overall, the results highlight the potential of
virtual and hybrid conference formats to meet the diverse expectations
of researchers while significantly reducing travel-related greenhouse
gas emissions and enhancing inclusivity by removing barriers like
funding and visa restrictions. Virtual and hybrid formats can currently
effectively address many conference objectives, except for networking,
which requires innovative tools to support informal exchanges. To
transition toward sustainable practices, conference organizers should
define clear goals, adopt purpose-driven formats, and invest in advanced
technologies that cater to diverse researcher needs. These changes can
align conferences with environmental and social sustainability goals
while addressing the evolving needs of the global research community.
Annex
The results of the survey will be published in a research article that is currently under review. Complerte info can be found here.
Tags:
conference
EPS Associate Members
ETH Zurich
survey
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday 13 February 2025
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Author: Alessandro Bettini
The Galilean Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts in Padua is now an EPS Historic Site, in honour of Galileo Galilei.
The
plaque unveiling ceremony took place on January 18, 2025, conducted by
the President of the European Physical Society (EPS), Prof. Mairi
Sakellariadou, and the President of the Academy, Prof. Giovanna Zaniolo,
during the annual academic Galilean Day, in the presence of the
academicians and of the public (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1: Unveiling
of the plaque. FLTR: Angela Bracco, President of the Italian
Physical Society (SIF), Mairi Sakellariadou ,
President of the European
Physical Society (EPS) and Giovanna Zaniolo, President of the Accademia
Galileiana. Credits Accademia Galileiana.
The event began
with an introduction by Prof. Zaniolo, including the reading of
congratulatory messages from the Senator Maria Elisabetta Alberti
Casellati, Minister for Institutional Reforms and Regulatory
Simplification, and the President of the Veneto Region, Luca Zaia. This
was followed by a brief explanation by myself of the motivations for the
designation (see below), as well as remarks by Prof. Sakellariadou and
Prof. Bracco, President of the Italian Physical Society (SIF), on the
role of their respective Societies.

Fig. 2: The emblem of the Accademia Galileiana. Credits Accademia Galileiana.
The
Academy is the oldest among the scientific ones still active in Italy,
having been founded on November 25, 1599, under the name Accademia dei Ricovrati. Its motto, Bipatens animis asylum—inscribed on its emblem (Fig. 2)—is a verse from Boethius, inspired in turn by the allegoric description in Homer’s Odyssey
of the Cave of the Naiads, with its two entrances. The motto was chosen
to symbolize a refuge for the convergence of contemplative life and
active life, between theoretical speculation and practical application.

Fig. 3: “Sala Guariento”, the meeting room of the Accademia. Credits Accademia Galileiana
The
ceremony took place in the meeting room of the Accademia (Fig. 3).
This, initially the Chapel of the Carrarese Palace, was magnificently
decorated by Guariento di Arpo around 1350, one of the UNESCO World
Heritage Sites. At the time, Padua was under the ruling of the Carrarese
family, still independent of Venice, that will conquer it in 1405. Born
five years after the departure of Giotto from Padua, Guariento dealt
with the indelible footprint of the Tuscan genius, while developing an
original pictorial language echoing the culture of his city. In the
frescoes of the Chapel, he focuses on the divine power, narrating
episodes from the Bible. The one in Fig. 4 is from the Book of Daniel,
on the Babylonian exile of the Jews. Having three young Jews refused the
order of Nebuchadnezzar to worship a statue, the king commanded to hurl
them into a fiery furnace, but they were saved by the Angel of the
Lord. In the painting, the king appears astonished, above the disordered
mass of terrified soldiers, in stark contrast to the solemn calmness of
the angel and the three victims, emerging unscathed from the furnace.

Fig. 4: The Three Young Men in the Fiery Furnace, by Guariento di Arpo. Credits Accademia Galileiana
The name of the Accademia was changed to Galileiana
in recent years, to celebrate Galileo Galilei as one of its founding
members. We read his name in the minutes of the first session on
November 25, 1599, the only scientist amongst university professors of
law and of philosophy, men of letters, learned nobles and quite a number
of ecclesiastics. Some academicians were good friends of the young
Tuscan, having together discussions on a wide range of philosophical and
cultural issues, being him versed in music, in drawing and in writing
of science, not only opening the way to modern science but also as
masterpieces of Italian literature. On the other hand, the fight would
become unavoidable with the Paduan philosophers, dogmatic followers of
Aristoteles, not able to accept the Galileian discoveries.
Galilei had already been active in the organization of the group since several months. Indeed, on the Ides of August 1599, he had signed a note in the Album amicorum of
Thomas Seget, describing himself as “Noble Florentine Mathematician and
Professor at the Paduan Academy.” Seget, a Scottish poet then in Veneto
and one of the first foreign Ricovrati, would later be in
Prague in 1610 with Kepler when the astronomer confirmed the Medicean
Stars. There, Seget would compose the famous epigram with the words Vicisti Galileae.

Fig. 5: The trajectory of a projectile; a) asymmetric in Nova scientia by Nicolò Tartaglia in 1537; b) symmetric for Galilei in 1599
In
his dedication, Galilei drew a parabola (Fig. 5 b) to illustrate the
motion of projectiles, a trajectory he had discovered through an
experiment conducted with Guidobaldo del Monte in 1592, the year Galilei
arrived in Padua. In his book of motion, Discorsi e dimostrazioni intorno a due nuove scienze,
published in 1638, Galilei will describe the experiment: he launched a
metal, perfectly spherical, ball on an inclined surface, such that the
ball, gently pressing on the surface, would leave a trace of its
passage. The experiment is remarkably simple, and revolutionary. Until
then, following Aristotle, it was believed that, on Earth, there were
only two types of motion: violent and natural, both
rectilinear—initially violent in the direction of the cannon's barrel,
finally natural, vertically downward toward the Earth's centre, as the
initial impetus was exhausted. This was also the case of the most
important textbook on the subject, the Nova scientia by the great mathematician Nicolò Tartaglia. Galilei demonstrated that the motion is symmetrical
in ascent and descent, entirely of the same type. This marked the
beginning of his journey toward discovering the laws of motion, a path
he was still following in 1599 and which would lead him to them in 1604.
The
text of the plaque, after commemorating Galilei’s contributions, also
notes that: “Among the early members of the Ricovrati was Elena Lucrezia
Cornaro Piscopia, elected a member in 1669 and that became the first
woman in the world to earn a university degree in 1678. In subsequent
centuries, the Academy counted among its members figures such as
Benjamin Franklin and John Herschel among foreign scientists, and among
Italians Tullio Levi-Civita, Gregorio Ricci Curbastro, Bruno Rossi and
Antonio Favaro, who oversaw the monumental National Edition of the Works
of Galileo Galilei.
Tags:
EPS Historic Sites
EPS HS
Galileo Galilei
Italy
Padua
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