Abstract artwork of flowing turquoise, blue and magenta curved lines and layered translucent shapes, creating a sense of motion against a dark background.

Transitions of the Atlantic Ocean circulation

The Atlantic Ocean circulation is vulnerable to large-scale instabilities that can drive major climate shifts. Understanding these transitions helps to interpret models, observations and future risks.

Announcements

  • Nature Reviews Physics invites research students and postdocs to write for us. We have two article types that are reserved for ECRs -- Journal Club and Tools of the Trade.

  •  A blackboard that has equations and diagrams related to quantum physics written on it.

    The International Year of Quantum Science and Technology celebrates 100 years of quantum mechanics, but also aims to foster a wider dialogue to explore how quantum science and society can benefit each other. With this Series, we highlight how quantum science interacts with society and invite physicists, engineers, educators, historians and other scholars to contribute to this discussion.

  • famous physicists

    A Series that invites physicists, historians, sociologists, psychologists and other scholars to consider the following questions. How does physics work today? How did we end up with this system? How could we imagine physics in the future?

  • Sustainability

    This ongoing collection brings together articles from Nature Reviews journals about how physicists can contribute to environmental sustainability – both by working on questions that have direct relevance to sustainability goals and understanding Earth’s climate, but also by changing the ways physicists work.

Advertisement

    • Various observed behaviours of overdoped cuprates are inconsistent with a weak-coupling, Fermi-liquid-based Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer description. This Perspective argues that these behaviours are consequences of substitutional disorder in a d-wave superconductor with a short-correlation length, and that a weak-coupling approach is possible in the disorder-free limit.

      • B. J. Ramshaw
      • Steven A. Kivelson
      Perspective
    • Artificial synapses based on non-volatile memory exhibit non-ideal effects that can limit the performance of neuromorphic systems. This Review discusses their origins, mitigation strategies and opportunities to exploit these non-idealities for new computing functionalities.

      • Shafin Bin Hamid
      • Jean Anne C. Incorvia
      • Samuel Liu
      Review Article
    • Terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy integrates picosecond pulses with atomic resolution, enabling detailed analysis of electron dynamics and molecular motions. This Technical Review outlines methods and applications, emphasizing insights into ultrafast phenomena and potential advances in quantum materials and technologies.

      • Jiayu Xu
      • Yunpeng Xia
      • Jia-Xin Yin
      Technical Review
    • This Technical Review compares data-driven approaches for discovering dynamical models in biology, focusing on regression-based methods, network-based architectures and decomposition techniques. It describes how these approaches extract dynamical information from time-resolved data and evaluates their strengths, limitations and complementarity.

      • Bartosz Prokop
      • Lendert Gelens
      Technical Review
    • Radioactive molecules containing octupole-deformed nuclei offer a promising platform for measuring fundamental symmetry violations and searching for new physics. This Perspective discusses how advances in their production, trapping and molecular quantum control are enabling precision tests of fundamental physics at energy scales complementary to those probed by high-energy colliders.

      • A. Jadbabaie
      • S. Ebadi
      • J. T. Singh
      Perspective
Editors, authors and referees work together to to create high-quality, timely and accessible resources for the scientific community.

Writing for Nature Reviews Physics

At Nature Reviews, editors work closely with authors and referees to create high-quality, timely and accessible resources for the scientific community.
Collection

Advertisement