The American Physical Society was founded in 1899 and is the world's second largest organization of physicists. The Society publishes more than a dozen science journals and organizes more than twenty science meetings each year. Over 40,000 members belong to the Society.
In more recent years, the activities of the Society have broadened considerably. Stimulated by the increase in Federal funding in the period after the Second World War, and even more by the increased public involvement of scientists in the 1960s, the APS is active in public and governmental affairs, and in the international physics community. In addition, the Society conducts extensive programs in education, public outreach, and media relations. The APS has fourteen divisions and nine topical groups covering all areas of physics research. There are six forums that reflect the interest of its 43,000 members in broader issues, and eight sections organized by geographical region.
In 1999, the APS celebrated its Centennial with the biggest-ever physics meeting in Atlanta. In 2005 the APS took the lead role in United States participation in the World Year of Physics, initiating several programs to broadly publicize physics during the 100th anniiversary of Albert Einstein's annus mirabilis. Einstein@Home, one of the projects the APS initiated during World Year of Physics, is an ongoing and popular distributed computing project.
However, because of legal issues, the planned name change was eventually abandoned by the APS executive board. Consequently, the official name as of December 2005 remains "American Physical Society."
1899 establishments | Physics organizations
American Physical Society | American Physical Society | 美國物理學會
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