
The Best Articles, Videos, and Newsletters in Physics
The most useful articles, videos, and newsletters in Physics from around the web, curated by thought leaders and our community.
Refind focuses on timeless pieces and updates the list whenever new, must-read articles or videos are discovered.
Top 5 Physics Articles
At a glance: these are the articles that have been most read, shared, and saved in Physics by Refind users in 2026 so far.
Videos
Watch a video to get a quick overview.
RESONANCE AND ALIENATION. TWO MODES OF EXPERIENCING TIME?
By Hartmut Rosa for TimeWorld 2019, the International congress on Time.https://timeworldevent.com/1/accueil/Hartmut Rosa is Professor of Sociology and Social...
Einstein's equations and the enigma of wormholes
Quantum wormholes are mathematically possible — but might also be physically impossible. Physicist Janna Levin explains the wormhole paradox.This interview i...
We tried to build a nuclear fusion reactor
What’s really going on with nuclear fusion?? @Simone Giertz and I try to explain...Get your own Oura ring (I got silver, if you want to match!): https://www....
No-one knows how explosions work (yet)
The first few moments of an explosion can't be simulated yet. But there's a team at the University of Sheffield working on it. ■ A paper about their work, in...
The Counterintuitive Physics of Turning a Bike
Thanks to http://www.harrys.com for sponsoring this video – use offer code MinutePhysics for $5 off your first purchaseA HUGE thanks to Michael Aranda for ae...
What is ...?
New to Physics? These articles make an excellent introduction.
What is Schrodinger's Cat?
Schrodinger's Cat is a hypothetical thought experiment created in 1935 by a man who loved physics and hated cats.
What Is Time?
The more closely we observe the present moment, the more amorphous it becomes.
What is quantum entanglement? A physicist explains the science of Einstein’s ‘spooky action at a distance’
A multitude of experiments have shown the mysterious phenomena of quantum mechanics to be how the universe functions. The scientists behind these experiments won the 2022 Nobel Prize in physics.
What Is a Neutrino? The Missing Key to Modern Physics Could Be a Ghost Particle
The enigmatic saga of one of astrophysics' most wanted particles.
What Is Quantum Entanglement?
Quantum bits (aka qubits), the reader is assured, are somehow "entangled" such that they rely on one another. If more detail is needed, we're told entanglement links qubits no matter how far apart they are—so long as the qubits are “coherent.” This hardly helps! So let's try a different approach.
How to ...?
How to break a theory
When a theory breaks, you learn how to build it better.
«ASK WEIRD QUESTIONS Einstein had a wild imagination. He asked himself questions like: What would he feel if he rode an elevator through outer space? What would he see if he chased a beam of light?»
How To Fall 35,000 Feet and Survive
You're six miles up, alone and falling without a parachute. Though the odds are long, a small number of people have found themselves in similar situations—and lived to tell the tale.
Trending
These links are currently making the rounds in Physics on Refind.
A quirk of relativity is the closest thing to achieving immortality
Nothing lives forever, at least, not in the known Universe. But relativity allows us to get closer than ever: from a physics perspective.
The idea so strange Einstein thought it broke quantum physics
Jim Al-Khalili introduces the technologies emerging from the second quantum revolution.
Higgs Boson was UK triumph, but British physics faces 'catastrophic' cuts
Britain is preparing to cancel its contribution to one of the Large Hadron Collider's next major upgrades.
No, particle physics colliders cannot ever destroy the Universe
Smashing things together at unprecedented energies sounds dangerous. But it's nothing the Universe hasn't already seen, and survived.
'It seemed to defy the laws of physics': The everlasting 'memory crystals' that could slash data centre…
In the face of rising emissions from data centres, researchers are turning to micro-explosions in glass, and using DNA to solve big data's big problem.
Short Articles
Short on time? Check out these useful short articles in Physics—all under 10 minutes.
Newton’s First Law Applies to Productivity Too
You can apply the classic laws of physics to your to-do list to be more productive—starting with Newton's famous first law.
What are the most energy-efficient reactions in physics?
Many reactions emit energy, often in large amounts, but cosmic efficiency is another metric altogether. Here's how to maximize your output.
How early human brains expanded over time
Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people Encephalization — the increase in brain size relative to the body — is a key feature…
Why is deep sleep so important to memory? It’s about time.
Slow brain waves are key to an important neurological process.
Plants struggled for millions of years after Earth’s worst climate catastrophe
A deep dive into Earth’s distant past shows how life on land struggled to recover long after the worst warming event of all time.
Long Articles
These are some of the most-read long-form articles in Physics.
Remembering Gladys West: who used Einstein to create GPS
Over the span of a single lifetime, the world has changed in ways that would have been virtually unimaginable in the first half of the 20th century. Two major breakthroughs that occurred in physics —…
20 Incredible Feats of Engineering Around the World — Daily Passport
Some engineering marvels seem to defy the laws of physics and nature. Learn about 20 incredible engineering feats that might merit a visit on your next vacation.
Ask Ethan: Can we turn Einstein's equations into Newton's law?
Sign up for the Starts With a Bang newsletter Travel the universe with Dr. Ethan Siegel as he answers the biggest questions of all Although Einstein is a legendary figure in science for a large number…
The Eureka Moment: How Calculated Risk-Taking Can Lead to Scientific Innovation
In the late 1990s, I caught a nasty case of the so-called Oxford flu. I was a grad student at the University of Cambridge at the time, working toward a PhD in condensed matter physics at the hallow…
The most important quantum advance of the 21st century
A century ago, quantum physics overthrew our view of a deterministic Universe. A profound 21st century theorem closes the door even further.
Podcasts
On the go? Listen to these Podcasts and audio in Physics.
BBC Inside Science
How a ‘dark energy’ experiment could upend Einstein's theory of the universe.
Thought Leaders
We monitor hundreds of thought leaders, influencers, and newsletters in Physics, including:
What is Refind?
Every day Refind picks the most relevant links from around the web for you. Picking only a handful of links means focusing on what’s relevant and useful.
How does Refind curate?
It’s a mix of human and algorithmic curation, following a number of steps:
- We monitor 10k+ sources and 1k+ thought leaders on hundreds of topics—publications, blogs, news sites, newsletters, Substack, Medium, Twitter, etc.
- In addition, our users save links from around the web using our Save buttons and our extensions.
- Our algorithm processes 100k+ new links every day and uses external signals to find the most relevant ones, focusing on timeless pieces.
- Our community of active users gets the most relevant links every day, tailored to their interests. They provide feedback via implicit and explicit signals: open, read, listen, share, mark as read, read later, «More/less like this», etc.
- Our algorithm uses these internal signals to refine the selection.
- In addition, we have expert curators who manually curate niche topics.
The result: lists of the best and most useful articles on hundreds of topics.
How does Refind detect «timeless» pieces?
We focus on pieces with long shelf-lives—not news. We determine «timelessness» via a number of metrics, for example, the consumption pattern of links over time.
How many sources does Refind monitor?
We monitor 10k+ content sources on hundreds of topics—publications, blogs, news sites, newsletters, Substack, Medium, Twitter, etc.
Who are the thought leaders in Physics?
We follow dozens of thought leaders in Physics, including Live Science, Nautilus Magazine, symmetry magazine, Science Magazine, CERN.
Missing a thought leader? Submit them here
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