What can CQG+ do for you?

Adam Day

Adam Day is the Publisher of Classical and Quantum Gravity and CQG+

Our primary goal with CQG+ is to raise the visibility of some of the best papers in CQG.

Take a look at the table below this post: it shows the 20 most downloaded papers in CQG since the launch of CQG+.  At the time that the data was collected, 15 papers had been promoted by CQG+. 13 of those are to be found in the top 20 (and the other 2 are not far behind).

This leaves no doubt in my mind that CQG+ is achieving its goal – but what does this mean for you? Continue reading

Interview with Dr Anna Heffernan: winner of the 2014 IOP Gravitational Physics Group’s thesis prize, co-sponsored by CQG

Anna Heffernan

Dr Anna Heffernan, Advanced Concepts Team, European Space Agency

What led you into science and your chosen area of research?

I’ve always enjoyed Mathematics and learning about the world around me. General relativity allows us to use mathematics to probe the very space time in which we exist – I find this fascinating, and it means I also get to play with equations for a living.

What do you find most interesting about this subject?

The fundamental questions it both addresses and raises. I also like the idea that with the emergence of gravitational wave astronomy, general relativity will soon be used as a tool to explore our universe.

Can you tell us a little bit about the work in your thesis?

Sure, my thesis was on the self-force problem – this is when Continue reading

IOP GPG thesis prize awarded to Dr Anna Heffernan

Clifford Will

Clifford Will is the Editor-in-Chief of Classical and Quantum Gravity, Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Florida, Chercheur Associé at the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, and James McDonnell Professor of Space Sciences Emeritus at Washington University in St. Louis.

I am delighted to announce that the IOP’s Gravitational Physics Group’s thesis prize for 2014, co-sponsored by Classical and Quantum Gravity, has been awarded to Dr Anna Heffernan for her eloquently written thesis on the self-force problem in gravitational physics, and for her detailed calculation of the singular component of the divergent fields that arise.

Dr Heffernan obtained her PhD from University College Dublin, under the supervision of Prof. Adrian Ottewill.  She currently works at Continue reading

Welcome to CQG+

Clifford Will

Clifford Will is the Editor-in-Chief of Classical and Quantum Gravity, Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Florida, Chercheur Associé at the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, and James McDonnell Professor of Space Sciences Emeritus at Washington University in St. Louis. His research interests are the observational consequences of general relativity and alternative theories of gravity, dynamics of systems containing compact bodies, and gravitational radiation.

Who would ever have imagined that perusing papers on gravitational physics would be like  trying to get a sip from a fire hose?  When I was starting my career 45 years ago, we used to receive by snail mail three or four times a year some mimeographed pages from the GR society listing the 20 or so recent preprints or published papers in the field that had been received at the offices in Bern, Switzerland.  Today, the gr-qc branch of the arXiv alone features 70 – 100 articles per week, and that doesn’t even include related articles in particle physics, astrophysics or mathematics.  We all learn, of course, how to narrow our focus to those papers that directly impact our own specific research, but what if we want to read a paper in some different area?  How do we identify a really good paper in that subtopic?

Today we launch CQG+, which we hope will help.  With CQG+ we will notify you of papers of exceptional quality, as identified by our referees.  We will ask authors or referees of such papers to write short commentaries explaining what the paper is about in accessible terms.  The entries will also include information about the author(s).  We will announce focus issues, where we have invited leading researchers in a specific topic to contribute papers on their latest research.   Our CQG “highlights’’, in which our editorial board selects the best articles from the previous year, will be featured in CQG+.  There may be an occasional editorial or commentary on a topic of interest to the readers of CQG+.  In fact the content of CQG+ may evolve with time, and to that end, we invite your feedback.   What would you find most useful in CQG+?

All you have to do is enter your email address at the foot of this page, and you will receive email alerts when there is something new in CQG+.

On a personal note, I want to thank the CQG Editorial Board and the CQG publishing team, headed by Adam Day, for their support of the journal during the last five years.  That stalwart support went a long way toward convincing me to “re-up’’ for another five-year term as Editor.  I also want to thank our CQG authors and referees – no journal can thrive without first-rate authors publishing great research or good referees holding authors’ feet to the fire to ensure that their papers are of the highest quality.  Our only goal is to publish the best work in gravitational physics, and I encourage you all to submit your next great paper to CQG.  Continue reading

CQG is 30

Adam Day

Adam Day is the Publisher of Classical and Quantum Gravity and CQG+

Time contracts when you are enjoying yourself! It doesn’t seem like 5 whole years have passed since we were celebrating CQG’s quarter-century – and we certainly have had a lot to celebrate over that short time – including a substantial rise in the number of high quality papers published by CQG.

In recognition of this excellent research, we are launching this new companion website, CQG+. Readers of CQG+ can look forward to notifications of high quality papers published in CQG and unique insights into those papers from authors and referees. Additionally, CQG+ will feature the latest news from CQG including notifications of new focus issues, the famous CQG highlights and more. Sign up for email alerts using the box at the foot of this page. Continue reading