Physics Magazine and Phys. Org. feature the Phys. Rev. Lett. article by the PCMT team

PCMT Actualités scientifiques Presse & média Parutions

Following the publication of our paper on the photodesorption of pure carbon monoxide ice in Physcal Review Letters (DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.238001) and then in Physics magazine (https://physics.aps.org/articles/v16/s173), this work has again been published, this time in the online popularization journal Phys. Org. (https://phys.org) and published on January 11, 2024 https://phys.org/news/2024-01-mechanism-ultraviolet-desorption-ice.html.

This journal has over 1000000 subscribers on social networks (Twitter, Facebook, etc.), which gives our paper and the laboratory great visibility.

Physics Magazine :

Physics Magazine is a free, online magazine from the American Physical Society. The publication primarily reports on papers from the Physical Review journals, focusing on results that will change the course of research, inspire a new way of thinking, or spark curiosity. The stories behind these findings are written by experts, journalists, and our staff writers for the benefit of the physics community and beyond.

The Physical Review provide no end of great stories. But physics is more than papers, and we want the magazine to reflect the people, debates, and events behind the reported research. Physics Magazine regularly includes interviews with physicists and news stories on a variety of topics, as well as articles about the influence of physics on the arts.

Phys. Org.:

Phys.org™ (formerly Physorg.com) is a leading web-based science, research and technology news service which covers a full range of topics. These include physics, earth science, medicine, nanotechnology, electronics, space, biology, chemistry, computer sciences, engineering, mathematics and other sciences and technologies. Launched in 2004, Phys.org’s readership has grown steadily to include 1.75 million scientists, researchers, and engineers every month. Phys.org publishes approximately 100 quality articles every day, offering some of the most comprehensive coverage of sci-tech developments world-wide. Quancast 2009 includes Phys.org in its list of the Global Top 2,000 Websites. Phys.org community members enjoy access to many personalized features such as social networking, a personal home page set-up, RSS/XML feeds, article comments and ranking, the ability to save favorite articles, a daily newsletter, and other options.

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