Japan Society of Applied Physics
The Japan Society of Applied Physics (応用物理学会, ōyō butsuri gakkai) (JSAP) is a Japanese group of researchers in the field of applied physics. JSAP originated in 1932 from a voluntary forum of researchers belonging to the University of Tokyo and the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research. During World War II, most research, even applied, was frozen. In 1946, the society was established as an official academic society.
Founded | October 25, 1949 |
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Founder | Hantaro Nagaoka, Kotaro Honda, Masatoshi Okouchi[1] |
Type | public interest incorporated association (公益社団法人) |
Registration no. | A007611 |
Location |
|
Origins | Forum of Applied Physics (応用物理談話会) |
Area served | Japan |
Members | 23,000[2] |
Key people | President Makoto Konagai |
Subsidiaries | Optical Society of Japan |
Website | www.jsap.or.jp |
Oyo Buturi
Oyo Buturi (ISSN 0369-8009) is the membership subscription of the Japan Society of Applied Physics. It is published monthly, in Japanese. Oyo Buturi International (1998) and JSAP International (2000-2008) are related English counterparts to Oyo Buturi.
Publications of the Japan Society of Applied Physics
- Japanese Journal of Applied Physics
- Applied Physics Express
- Optical Review
- Oyo Buturi
- Oyo Buturi International
- JSAP International
gollark: I also have some knowledge of non-bee animals.
gollark: Beekeeper/rogue.
gollark: But you could plausibly say "hmm, I will contact my magical research institute colleagues about this" and such.
gollark: Wait, is our entire party except me magic magicers?
gollark: I can give much better descriptions for quarks though?
See also
- The Physical Society of Japan
- Optical Society of Japan
References
- "沿革・基本活動方針 (History and Fundamental Policies)" (in Japanese). JSAP. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
- "Members/Organizations". JSAP. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
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