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Posted By Administration,
Monday 1 November 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
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Author: IUPAP
The
Commission on Low Temperature Physics (C5) of IUPAP solicits
nominations of outstanding young experimental or theoretical physicists
for 2022 Young Scientist Prizes. The prizes, each consisting of an IUPAP
medal, certificate, and a cash award (~ 1000 Euros), and each winner
will give an invited presentation at the 29th International Conference
on Low Temperature Physics (LT29), Sapporo, Japan, August 18-24, 2022.
Candidates for the prize should have received their PhD within 8 years
from the deadline for submission of nominations. This deadline is
December 15, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. CST.
Nominations should consist
of a nomination letter, including a suggested citation less than 20
words, two additional letters from experts not in conflict of interest
with the candidate i.e. doctoral, or postdoctoral mentor, or close
collaborator, detailing the nominee’s qualifications and scientific
achievements, a complete CV, and a list of publications in a single pdf
file, with the file name being the candidate’s name with last name
first, e.g. HalperinWP.IUPAP , and mailed to the C5 commission chair,
William Halperin: w-halperin@northwestern.edu and secretary Naoto
Nagaosa: nagaosa@riken.jp.
IUPAP C5 welcomes applications from women and from underrepresented groups in the field of low temperature physics.
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Young Scientists Prize
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Posted By Administration,
Sunday 31 October 2021
Updated: Friday 12 November 2021
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Planned to be annual, this new initiative will provide a showcase for the EPS and its activities, as well as for the activities of its Member Societies, Divisions and Groups, and Action Committees. The Forum will attract new members. It will involve the EPS Associate Members through a « Physics meets Industry » event and will also offer reviews of the latest developments in selected fields of physics research.
The EPS Forum will bring together representatives of the 42 National Member Societies, 18 Divisions and Groups and 40 Associate Members. It will be held from Thursday 2 June to Saturday 4 June 2022 at the International Conference Centre of Sorbonne University, Paris, France.
This three-day meeting should gather 500 participants including a majority of PhD students, Post-Docs and early-career researchers who will be introduced to exciting research opportunities in large companies and start-ups. The scientific topics addressed during the 2022 EPS Forum will be condensed matter physics, energy and sustainability, transportation and technology, accelerators, high-energy particle physics, nuclear physics, quantum technologies and photonics, machine learning and artificial intelligence, biophysics, sequencing of proteins, pandemics and cancer treatments.
The first day will be dedicated to the employment of young physicists and favour direct exchanges with major physics-based industrial companies. The second day will host a scientific colloquium. Recent achievements in physics will be highlighted by the most outstanding physicists in Europe and beyond, while round tables will discuss societal issues and best practices between the EPS Member Societies. The third day will be the regular business meeting of the EPS Council.
Already 30 large industrial groups, medium and small-sized companies and leading start-ups have responded positively to our invitation, including Thales Alenia Space, Airbus-France, Euclid Consortium, ELI Beamlines, CERN, GSI-Darmstadt, IBA, AGS Superconductor, COSYLAB, TRUMPF, IBM, Zeiss and Quandela.
Professors Barry Barish (Caltech, USA), Serge Haroche (Collège de France, Paris) and John M. Kosterlitz (Brown University, USA), laureates of the Nobel Prize in Physics, have also agreed to participate in this event. Ms. Mariya Gabriel, European Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth as well as Prof. Maria Leptin, the new president of the European Research Council (ERC), have been invited and they have tentatively agreed to deliver presentations during our event.
The EPS Forum will bring new impetus to the EPS and its activities, and will enhance our visibility and impact. More information is detailed on the website: https://www.epsforum.org/. The Forum meets a number of priorities for all EPS Members. So, rendez-vous in Paris between 2 and 4 June 2022!

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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday 20 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
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In
2013, the European Physical Society launched the Emmy Noether
Distinction to recognise noteworthy women physicists having a strong
connection to Europe through their nationality or work.
Emmy
Noether, with her fundamental and revolutionary work in the areas of
abstract algebra and on the conservation laws in theoretical physics, is
an exceptional historical figure for all generations - past, present
and future - of physicists.
The laureates of the Emmy Noether
Distinction are chosen for their capacity to inspire the next generation
of scientists, and especially encourage women to pursue a career in
physics. Attribution criteria therefore focus on the candidate’s
• research achievements
• endeavours in favour of gender equality and the empowerment of women in physics
• coordination of projects and management activity
• committee memberships
• teaching activities.
Nominators are encouraged to address these five points in their proposal.
The EPS Emmy Noether Distinction for Women in Physics is awarded twice a year, in winter and in summer.
The
selection committee, appointed by the EPS Equal Opportunities
Committee, will consider nominations of women physicists working in
Europe for the 2021 Winter Edition of the Emmy Noether Distinction from
the end of October 2021. As is customary for the Winter Edition of the
Distinction, particular attention will be paid to senior candidates.
For the present edition, the deadline for nominations is extended to November, 1st 2021.
To make a nomination, please, email the following information to the EPS Secretariat:
- A
cover letter, detailing (in no more than 3 paragraphs) the motivation
for awarding the EPS Emmy Noether Distinction to the nominee;
- The nominee’s name, institution and email;
- The nominee’s CV;
- The nominator’s name, institution, and email.
- Optional: No more than 3 support letters.
Download the distinction charter and read more about the EPS Emmy Noether Distinction on the EPS website.
Tags:
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distinction
Emmy Noether
EPS Emmy Noether Distinction
EPS EOC
EPS Equal Opportunities Committee
women in physics
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 19 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
|
Author: José María de Teresa
Following the resignation of Massimo
Rontani (CNR Modena, Italy) as of 31 December 2021, the EPS Condensed
Matter Division (CMD) Board is looking for an enthusiastic colleague
specialised in Semiconductors and Insulators research to join the Board.
In addition, the chosen candidate will chair the Semiconductors and
Insulators section. If you are interested in joining the board, or
otherwise actively contributing to the Semiconductors and Insulators
section, please contact the CMD Board chair (José María De Teresa) and the secretary of the Semiconductors and Insulators section (Erich Runge). In order to support your candidature, please, submit a letter of interest and your CV.
Deadline: 1st November 2021.
The CMD Board warmly thanks Massimo Rontani for his contributions in these last years!
Tags:
call
chair
EPS CMD
EPS Condensed Matter Division
Semiconductors and Insulators section
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 19 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
|
Author: Christian Beck
This year’s prize of the EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics
Division honours two outstanding scientists, who are pioneers in their
respective fields. The 2021 EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize
was awarded during the 3rd EPS conference “Statistical Physics of Complex Systems” at SISSA/ICTP Trieste, 8-10 September 2021.
Albert-László
Barabási (Northeastern University and Harvard Medical School, Boston
& Central European University, Budapest)
was awarded the prize “for
his pioneering contributions to the development of complex network
science, in particular for his seminal work on scale-free networks, the
preferential attachment model, error and attack tolerance in complex
networks, controllability of complex networks, the physics of social
ties, communities, and human mobility patterns, genetic, metabolic, and
biochemical networks, as well as applications in network biology and
network medicine”.
Barabási is a pioneer in network science.
He played a leading role in the development of this new area of science,
not only at its beginning, but also taking an active part in many of
its major advances and breakthroughs in the past two decades. His first
breakthrough was presented at the turn of the century, in 1999, with the
discovery (together with Reka Albert) that many real-world networks
exhibit a scale-free structure, with the number of interactions of each
component spanning orders of magnitude. This discovery exposed a deep
universality, observed in networks from social, biological and
technological domains. In a broader perspective, this discovery in 1999
is often considered as the birth of network science. He went further to
introduce a statistical physics model for the emergence of scale-free
phenomena, the preferential attachment model, one of the most cited
papers in the history of physics. His work has connected researchers
from different disciplines in an interdisciplinary way. In biology – his
work has shown the crucial role of genetic, metabolic and biochemical
networks in modeling cellular processes. In medicine – he has introduced
the concept of network medicine, linking pathologies based on
shared genetic roots, and predicting novel therapeutics. In social
systems – his works have uncovered the underlying physics of social ties, communities and human mobility patterns.
The
impact of Barabási’s research activity is well beyond the borders of
physics, touching many interdisciplinary fields, representing a major
extension in the range of applicability of statistical physics,
reflected by the 270000 citations that his work has received. It
embraces a vast array of research areas including social network
analysis, internet and information technology, and biology and medicine.
He contributed to the evidence that the scaling of networks is not a
feature of man-made systems only, but characterizes e.g. metabolic
networks as well. Today the concepts and tools introduced by him in
network science are used on a daily basis by a huge number of scientists
to study the millions of networks characterizing living and man-made
complex systems.
Angelo Vulpiani (Sapienza University, Rome)
was award the prize “for
his seminal contributions to statistical and nonlinear physics,
touching fundamentally important issues in dynamical systems theory and
statistical mechanics, including the mechanism of stochastic resonance,
multifractality of invariant sets of dynamical systems, the dynamics and
multifractal properties of turbulent flows, chaos in Hamiltonian
systems, and the limits of predictability in complex systems”.
Vulpiani
is an outstanding physicist who has made seminal contributions to
statistical and nonlinear physics. His research interests are
distinguished by their strong connection to fundamental issues of
statistical mechanics and to the works of classics like Boltzmann,
Kolmogorov and Khinchin.
Over the years he has also built up a
strong environment in Rome with many young researchers who have gone on
to contribute elsewhere. Furthermore, he is a prolific author of books
for the general scientific public, both in Italian and in English, as
well as the author of several well-regarded monographs. His immense
productivity is reflected by almost 500 co-authored scientific
publications. Most relevant, some of his works mark major
break-throughs in their field or have opened up completely new fields of
research. The most prominent example is stochastic resonance which, in
1981, was introduced by him together with Roberto Benzi, Alfonso Sutera,
and the current (2021) physics nobel prize winner Giorgio Parisi. This
developed into an immensely active research area afterwards.
In
1984, Vulpiani (together with Paladin) showed that multifractality
(originally defined by Mandelbrot in a purely mathematical setting) is
of relevance for the characterization of invariant sets in dynamical
systems, and also in turbulent flows. Today, the concept of
multifractality is an inherent part of dynamical systems theory and also
highly relevant for data analysis, where it has moved into the time
domain, i.e. it is used to characterize a variety of measured time
series observed in many applications. Other important works of his are
his contributions to chaos in Hamiltonian systems and the equipartition
of energy (follow-ups of the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam problem), his
contributions to diffusion and transport in various nonlinear settings,
and his repeated efforts to understanding, defining, and investigating
complexity in general.
The prizes of the Division also contain the
EPS-SNPD Early Career Prize, which is traditionally shared by two
younger scientists and which was also awarded in Trieste. This year the
prize went to Federico Battiston and Caterina De Bacco.
Federico Battiston (Central European University, Vienna)
was honoured for “for
his outstanding work on nonlinear dynamics and emergent collective
phenomena in multilayer and higher-order networks, including diffusion,
synchronization, social and evolutionary processes”.
Caterina De Bacco (Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Tuebingen)
was honoured for “her
outstanding work on statistical physics of random walkers on random
graphs, stochastic search processes, routing optimization on networks
and effective algorithms for community detection”.

Due
to the Covid-19 situation, the conference in Trieste was a hybrid
conference, with many participants participating online, but some
participants being present in person as well. The photograph shows the
prize winners and some members of the Board of the EPS Statistical and
Nonlinear Physics Division. From left to right: Federico Battiston, Erik
Aurell, Angelo Vulpiani, Albert-László Barabási (on screen), Christian Beck, Caterina De Bacco, Raul Toral, Guido Caldarelli.
Tags:
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EPS SNPD
EPS Statisical and Non-linear Physics Division
prize
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 19 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
|
Author: Paula Heron
Physical Review Physics Education Research (PRPER) covers the full array of experimental and theoretical research relating to the teaching and learning of physics and astronomy. PRPER is the only fully open access journal for physics education research. Because it is published as fully open access, the journal does not receive funds from libraries to support publication costs. Thus, it is necessary for journal authors to pay an article processing charge (APC) in order to publish their articles.
We realize that current APCs are prohibitive for some authors. Thus, PRPER has a procedure for authors to request full or partial fee waivers. Once your article is accepted for publication, you will receive an email from PRPER with information about how to request a fee waiver. Fee waiver requests are not processed by the PRPER Editors and the Editors are not informed about who has requested or received fee waivers. Having fee waiver requests after acceptance and hidden from the Editorial staff is done to avoid financial considerations having any impact on publication decisions.
Fee waivers may be requested by authors who are unable to pay the full APCs. We do ask authors to consider all possible sources of funding available prior to requesting a fee waiver. Many institutions have such funds available. In requesting a fee waiver you will need to explain why a waiver is needed and what steps you have taken to seek funding. Authors from countries for which the American Physical Society (APS) offers free online access to its subscription journals are automatically eligible for fee waivers. A list of such countries can be found at http://ejds.ictp.it/ejds/.
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Posted By Administration,
Monday 18 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 5 October 2021
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Details about the EPS Plasma Physics Innovation Prize 2022 can be found at: http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/awards/innovation-award/
Deadline for nominations: 1st February 2022.
Tags:
call
EPS Plasma Physics Division
EPS PPD
Innovation Prize
nominations
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday 28 September 2021
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Details about the 2022 EPS Plasma Physics Division “Hannes Alfvén Prize” can be found here.
Tags:
call
EPS Plasma Physics Division
EPS PPD
Hannes Alfvén Prize
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Posted By Administration,
Friday 24 September 2021
Updated: Friday 24 September 2021
|
Author: Kees van der Beek
Sara Bolognesi: Laureate of the Summer 2021 EPS Emmy Noether Distinction
Kees van der Beek, chair of the EPS Equal Opportunities Committee,
spoke to Sara Bolognesi of CEA-IRFU in Saclay, France, laureate of the
Summer 2021 EPS Emmy Noether Distinction on her work, her interactions
with other communities, research funding, reconciling work and family
life, and mentoring of young physicists.
Kees van der Beek (KvdB):
My very warmest congratulations with the Summer 2021 Emmy Noether
Distinction for your contributions to, and, indeed, leading role in the
CMS and T2K experiments! Can you explain what your current scientific
interests are, why your experiments are important, and what the stakes
are?
Sara Bolognesi (SB): My present scientific
interest is in neutrino oscillations. Neutrinos are very interesting
particles, but very difficult to study! This is because they are hard to
produce, and once you produced them, they are hard to detect, because
of their extremely weak interaction with matter. Therefore, very large
amounts of neutrinos must be produced for any given experiment, and huge
detectors are needed to obtain the necessary sensibility to pronounce
oneself on physical effects related to them. However, building such huge
instruments is well worth it, since neutrino physics is one of the most
promising avenues to push our understanding of fundamental physics
beyond our present interpretation, the Standard Model. The T2K (Tokai to
Kamioka) experiment seeks to quantify neutrino oscillations (evolution
of one neutrino type into another) through measurement of the so-called
mixing parameters. This can, given sufficient sensitivity, unveil the
symmetries in the neutrino mass ordering and flavour mixing, and most
importantly, a possible violation of charge-parity (CP). This would be a
crucial discovery, while CP-violation has been measured in quark
sector, this would be a new fundamental source of CP-violation and the
first in the lepton sector. We have, so far, made significant steps
towards a measurement of possible violation of CP symmetry in neutrino
physics, but experiments have to be made more sensitive – which is my
aim and that of my team. Remarkably, since the collisions of neutrinos
with the detector material involve their complex, many-body interaction
with the multiplicity of particles composing the target nuclei, reaching
the required accuracy requires an adequate comprehension of the nuclear
physics involved. This is true for both the accurate characterisation
of the emitted neutrino flux, as for the understanding of the scattering
cross-sections in the remote detector. What I love about my work is the
fact that it therefore involves many different communities – every day,
I learn something new!
KvdB: Is the search for
new physics the reason why you made a spectacular move from Higgs physics
in the framework of the CMS collaboration to neutrino physics, and
this, right after the discovery of the Higgs, when results were ready
for the reaping? How did you decide this shift?
SB:
Indeed, after the discovery of the Higgs, the entire team was extremely
excited. However, in spite of the Higgs having been discovered, there
are many questions to which the standard model cannot provide answers.
In particular, it cannot possibly be valid to arbitrary high-energy
scales, so there must be something beyond. An illuminating overview
presented by Hiroshi Murayama from Berkeley at a Higgs workshop in 2013
made it very clear to me that neutrinos are an extremely promising
window to such very high-energy scales. In particular, the standard
model cannot explain why neutrinos have mass, nor why they oscillate the
way they do. Both these phenomena determine the numerical values of a
great many parameters, so understanding them would be a particularly
important step into our further comprehension of nature, and, in
particular, the existence of as-yet hidden symmetries. Practically, I
was greatly helped by the job opportunity formulated by CEA-IRFU, that
did not only propose a permanent position, but did not require previous
experience in the field of neutrino physics – indeed, they were very
open to candidates form other fields. This allowed me to settle and
establish myself both as a scientist and in my personal life. As a
particle physicist, the learning curve in neutrino physics was steep,
but I feel I was truly helped both in my institute and by the welcoming
attitude of the neutrino community.
KvdB:What are the most satisfying – and more difficult parts of your work?
SB:
I love the interaction between many communities and between
experimentalists and theorists that characterizes neutrino physics. The
most difficult part of my position is securing the necessary financial
resources – we are not trained for that as physicists! Here again, I see
the need to go out and obtain funding as an opportunity to learn, even
if this part of the job takes up more and more of our time. We, as
physicists, should accept the manner the world we live in functions. We
must, before publicizing our work in physics and asking for funding,
stop and really ask ourselves whether what we project to do is truly
worth of funding. To have to reflect on this and then explain to
non-experts why society should fund physics is an important and
necessary part of our job. For me, frustration arises when decisions are
made based on political priorities rather than scientific arguments.
While we need a realistic compromise due to the boundary conditions
posed by the world we live in, our primary goal should always be driven
by physics arguments.
More fundamentally, there are better ways in
which a funding process could work. Notably, the very nature of
fundamental physics research requires, at the least, medium-term funding
based on a vision and multi-year strategy submitted by the team, lab,
institute, or collaboration submitting the request, and not the calls
for short-term, individualistic projects that we see all too often
today. At the same time, I’m very worried by the inertia that comes with
increasing size of the collaborations and cost of the experiments. This
not only slows their development but also makes it very difficult to
react and adapt the overall strategy to physics evidence when new
results are obtained.
I, obviously, do not hold the perfect recipe
but our compass should always point to the long-term objective of
advancing physics, no matter how difficult this could be from a
political or funding point of view.
KvdB: You are
obviously very passionate about physics, and that since a very young
age. Where did you get this passion, and how did you choose physics?
SB:
(laughs) You will be surprised to know that at the outset, I first
started on a literary, and not on a scientific path in my secondary
school studies! It was my professor of philosophy in secondary school
who suggested that we read simple texts on modern physics to open our
mind. These were simple texts that addressed issues such as
particle-wave duality, the nature of light, matter, and their
interactions, that had a very large impact on me. I realised that this
touched on something so fundamental for the understanding of our world
that I could not accept to ignore it: I wanted to learn more about it!
My subsequent enrolment in the physics programme at the university of
Torino has lead to two life-changing experiences. The first was my
participation in the CMS-Torino group as of my third year of studies, a
group with several women in leadership positions. All had a rich social
and family life, as well as being highly successful physicists, which
allowed me to project myself in my own possible future. The second was
my work at CERN, in a truly multicultural environment. This was, to me,
as much as a scientific experience, a truly human experience that made
me decide that this is what I wanted for the rest of my life. In the
neutrino community, which involves close collaboration between
physicists from Europe, Japan, and the Americas, I find this
multicultural, tolerant, and very human ambiance once again.
KvdB: Did you ever have problems reconciling your work and your family?
SB:
There have been some difficult moments, but, honestly, I am working in
an environment and for an employer that is extremely respectful of the
balance between work and one’s private life, to the point where the
balance we can achieve here is envied by our foreign collaborators. For
instance, when my partner and I adopted our children, my professional
environment was extremely respectful of our choice and very helpful when
I returned to the laboratory. I cannot help but think that this is
related to the fact that the head of my laboratory, the head of the IRFU
Institute, and the head of our CEA Direction are all women. A difficult
moment was the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic and the first lockdown -
even if I realise that the situation was much harder for so many
others. Where I had, over two years, established a good work-family life
balance, this was now, all of a sudden, overturned. Here I was working
from home, with three children by my side, and required to school them!
The real problem here is not, in my opinion, one of gender, but that of
attaining equilibrium between family life and professional life in
general, whatever the family’s composition. I am very fortunate in that
my husband fully participates in family tasks, including during the
COVID-19 period; having a family that supports me in my professional
challenges is very important for me.
KvdB: You have had many role models in Torino. Do you consider yourself to be a role model now?
SB:
I hope I am! All the more so since, in my group today, there are nearly
as many women as men. We do discuss gender issues as well as family
issues, especially with younger women. I tell them that their life
choice is, of course, theirs. However, they should never make this
choice based on fear. Being afraid that one cannot be a woman and a
physicist at the same time, of “not being able to”, must never be a
criterion for choosing work over one’s private life or vice versa.
Taking responsibility for one’s choice however comes with effort, the
effort to make it work, and the effort to find one’s correct personal
balance. The message I wish to convey is: if you want a career in
physics, go for it, if you love physics, you will manage!
Kees van der Beek (KvdB):
You are in a position of ever increasing responsibilities. Do you have
ideas on how an academic, scientific environment can help empower women
active in its midst?
Sara Bolognesi (SB): That’s a
tough question! There are no easy solutions to this. Nevertheless, I
think two things can help. The first, and most effective in my opinion,
is tutoring, through examples. When one meets a young woman in doubt
about her career choice, having a role model with whom she can interact
or a tutor that serves as an example and build her self-confidence can
really help. At T2K we also have a Diversity group that reaches out to
young women in this sense. The second, and more general point is that we
all, women and men, should make an effort to make our professional
environment less aggressive. Even though academic discussion can be
passionate, we should always be careful to respect the other, and not
try to, for example, undermine the other’s self-confidence. Speak out,
discuss, argue, with passion and conviction, but do so as if you were
speaking to a close family member, your daughter or son, with respect
and understanding. Science is an environment for discussion, where no
one holds the absolute truth.

Sara Bolognesi acting on the valves of the gas system of the near detector (ND280) of T2K - image credit: Sara Bolognesi
Tags:
CEA-IRFU
CERN
EPS Emmy Noether Distinction
EPS EOC
EPS Equal Opportunities Committee
Higgs boson
LHC
particle physics
T2K
women in physics
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