万维提示:
1、投稿方式:在线投稿。
2、官网网址:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/glasgow-mathematical-journal
3、投稿网址:https://cup.msp.org/submit/gmj
4、期刊刊期:一年出版三期。
2021年4月2日星期五
投稿须知
【官网信息】
Instructions for authors
Glasgow Mathematical Journal
Editorial Policy
The Glasgow Mathematical Journal publishes high quality original research papers in pure and applied mathematics. Its policy is to feature a wide variety of research areas and it welcomes the submission of papers from all parts of the world. Selection for publication is on the basis of reports from specialist referees commissioned by the Subject Editors or Editor-in-Chief.
Submission of Manuscripts
The journal uses an online submission and refereeing system, EditFlow. To submit your paper, please see here: https://cup.msp.org/submit/gmj
When submitting a paper you will be asked to nominate a subject editor. The current subject editors and their areas of interest are as follows:
Subject Editors:
Andrew Baker: algebraic topology.
Alex Bartel: number theory, arithmetic geometry, finite groups.
Neal Bez: harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, geometric analysis.
Gavin Brown: algebraic geometry.
Oleg Chalykh: mathematical physics, integrable systems and geometry, orthogonal polynomials and special functions.
Indira Chatterji: group theory, geometric group theory.
Joel Fine: differential geometry, geometric analysis.
Stefan Friedl: geometric topology.
Jan Grabowski: noncommutative rings and algebras, quantum algebra, cluster algebras, representation theory.
Volodymyr Mazorchuk: representation theory, Lie algebras, semigroups, categorification.
Vitaly Moroz: applied analysis and nonlinear partial differential equations.
Constanze Roitzheim: algebraic topology.
Colva M. Roney-Dougal: finite group theory, computational algebra, algebraic groups.
Adam Skalski: operator algebras and related topics, functional analysis.
You should choose a subject editor closest to your field. Alternatively you may nominate the Editor-in- Chief, Brendan Owens, who will assign a Subject Editor to deal with your submission.
During the submission process you will be asked to confirm that the paper is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
The Journal encourages the use of .pdf files. LaTeX and Postscript as well as other formats can be uploaded but these will be converted into .pdf format. Note that .dvi files cannot be converted. Care should be taken with this option, especially if non-standard macros are being used, and the .pdf version the system produces should be carefully checked before final submission.
Copyright
The policy of The Glasgow Mathematical Journal is that authors (or in some cases their employers) retain copyright and grant The Glasgow Mathematical Journal Trust a licence to publish their work. In the case of gold open access articles this is a non-exclusive licence. Authors must complete and return an author publishing agreement form as soon as their article has been accepted for publication; the journal is unable to publish the article without this. Please download the appropriate publishing agreement here.
Layout of manuscripts
Papers should be typed or word-processed in double spacing throughout, with wide margins and on one side of the paper. They should be prepared so as to conform to the practice in current issues of the Journal as regards general layout, references, tables and figures. Please avoid footnotes if possible. Papers must begin with an abstract of not more than 200 words, and they should list at least one AMS 2010 classification number or keyword. This information is also required before your manuscript can be uploaded. Instructions regarding unusual symbols or any typographical point that might cause confusion should be provided on a separate sheet. These may be uploaded as separate files. If special fonts are used, they should conform to the Journal's practice. Authors are reminded that they should retain a copy of anything submitted for publication since neither the Journal nor the publisher can accept liability for any loss.
Illustrations
Text figures must be suitable for direct photographic reproduction and supplied separate from the text but allocated clearly to sections of the text. Low resolution version may be uploaded at submission as separate files. Originals of figures should not be sent until the paper has been accepted. A list of captions for figures should be attached separately. Black and white figures are free for both online and print publication, while colour figures are free for online publication only. Colour figures for print publication are subjected to RightsLink charges (£200/$320 per figure). Figures should be submitted in the Encapsulated PostScript (EPS/.eps) format; when that is not possible, Word documents containing figures and illustrations in .jpg format are also acceptable.
References
References should be placed at the end of the paper, arranged and numbered in alphabetical order of the author's names. Titles of journals should be abbreviated as in Mathematical Reviews. In the text, reference numbers should be enclosed in square brackets to distinguish them from formula numbers which should be quoted in round brackets. A reference to a book should give the author, title (in italics), edition, publisher, year of publication; e.g.
[1] P. T. Johnstone, Stone Spaces, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Math. no. 3 (Cambridge University Press, 1982).
A reference to an article should give the author, title of article, short title of periodical (in italics), series number (if any), volume number, year, and the beginning and end pages of the paper; e.g.
[2] R. Guralnick, T. Pentilla, C. E. Praeger and J. Saxl, Finite linear groups, Proc. London Math. Soc. (3) 78 (1999), 167-214.
Proofreading
Prior to publication sets of proofs of each paper will be sent to authors. For papers with more than one author the proofs are sent to the first named author unless the Editors receive other instructions. Authors are asked to correct and return proofs promptly. Typographical or factual errors only may be changed at proof stage. The publisher reserves the right to charge authors for excessive corrections of nontypographical errors. No page charge is made.
Offprints
No paper offprints are provided, but the corresponding author will be sent the pdf of the published article. Print offprints may be purchased at extra cost at proof stage.
Open Access
Authors have the option to publish their paper under a fully Open Access agreement, upon payment of a one-off Article Processing Charge. In this case, the final published Version of Record will be made freely available to all in perpetuity under a creative commons license, enabling its re-use and re-distribution. This Open Access is only offered to authors upon acceptance of an article for publication.
Authors can choose to publish under the following Creative Commons licenses:
CC-BY (Attribution)
CC-BY-NC-SA (Attribution – Non-Commercial – Share Alike)
CC-BY-NC-ND (Attribution – Non-Commercial – No Derivatives)
CC-BY is the default license but the others are available on request. For information on what each license allows, please see this page on Creative Commons Licenses.
Authors choosing the Open Access option are required to complete the Open Access License to Publish form. More information about Open Access, including the current Article Processing Charge, can be found on our website.
If you are interested in converting previously published work to Gold Open Access, please contact the editorial office at gmj@maths.gla.ac.uk
Cambridge Language Editing Service
We suggest that authors whose first language is not English have their manuscripts checked by a native English speaker before submission. This is optional but will help to ensure that any submissions that reach peer review can be judged exclusively on academic merit. We offer a Cambridge service which you can find out more about here, and suggest that authors make contact as appropriate. Please note that use of language editing services is voluntary and at the author’s own expense. Use of these services does not guarantee that the manuscript will be accepted for publication nor does it restrict the author to submitting to a Cambridge-published journal.
©Glasgow Mathematical Journal Trust 2012