期刊名称:EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED MATHEMATICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Since 2008 EJAM surveys have been expanded to cover Applied and Industrial Mathematics. Coverage of the journal has been strengthened in probabilistic applications, while still focusing on those areas of applied mathematics inspired by real-world applications, and at the same time fostering the development of theoretical methods with a broad range of applicability.
Survey papers contain reviews of emerging areas of mathematics, either in core areas or with relevance to users in industry and other disciplines.
Research papers may be in any area of applied mathematics, with special emphasis on new mathematical ideas, relevant to modelling and analysis in modern science and technology, and the development of interesting mathematical methods of wide applicability.
Instructions to Authors
European Journal of Applied Mathematics Editorial policy The journal publishes research papers and survey papers. Research papers may be in any area of applied mathematics, with especial emphasis on new mathematical ideas relevant to modelling and analysis in modern science and technology and the development of interesting mathematical methods of wide applicability. There is no restriction in the scope or style of mathematics as long as the content is presented to be as accessible as possible to the entire community of mathematicians and mathematical scientists. This applies in particular to the Introduction and conclusion. Standard mathematical techniques will only be published if they are associated with novel applications or lead to substantial advances in established problem areas. Survey papers aim to bridge the gap between academia and industry by presenting mathematical methods relevant to industry in its broadest sense, ranging from manufacturing to finance, telecommunications to biotechnology, and describing industrial problems of interest to mathematicians. Coverage includes reviews of techniques in relation to industrial application, new problem areas for which mathematical models and techniques are not yet available, comparison of solution methods, and descriptions of modelling approaches. Submission of manuscripts Papers may be submitted to any of the Editors. Three copies should be sent accompanied by the author’s address, telephone and fax number, and if possible an electronic mailing address. Electronic communications can be used for minor corrections and for messages to the Editors. Submission of a paper is taken to imply that it has not been previously published and that it is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Authors of articles published in the journal assign copyright to Cambridge University Press (with certain rights reserved) and you will receive a copyright assignment form for signature on acceptance of your paper. Authors are encouraged to submit papers electronically by sending a pdf file in the first instance, to ejam@maths.ox.ac.uk;. On final acceptance of a paper, authors should send the LaTeX source code to the Editors-in-Chief, together with a pdf file derived from these files. The publisher reserves the right to typeset any article by conventional means if the author’s TeX code presents problems in production. Details of Style files The LaTex 2.09 style file ejm.sty together with a guide to its use ejmguide.tex, or the corresponding LaTex 2e file ejm.cls are available via anonymous ftp from the Cambridge University Press site at ftp://ftp.cup.cam.ac.uk/pub/texarchive/journals/latex/ejm-sty/ or ftp://ftp.cup.cam.uk/pub/texarchive/journals/latex/ejm-cls . In case of difficulties obtaining these files, there is a help-line available via e-mail; please contact texline@cup.cam.ac.uk. The file readme.txt contains instructions; alternatively, authors may use plain ‘article?style. Layout of manuscripts Papers should be typewritten in double spacing throughout, on one side of the paper. Please avoid footnotes if possible. Papers must begin with an abstract of not more than 300 words, and they should end with a brief concluding section. The SI system of units must be used throughout. There is no formal restriction on length, but short papers are likely to appear sooner than long ones (over 20 typeset pages) which are likely to be subject to delay. Illustrations Wherever possible figures should be produced and incorporated into the text using a standard \LaTeXcompatible package; they will be reproduced \emph{with} the author’s lettering. EJAM welcomes the submission of papers containing colour illustrations. However, owing to the high cost of colour reproduction, authors are asked to contribute approximately ?00 for each full page in colour. Exemption from charges for colour reproduction will only be made if referees decide that colour is essential, and if authors make an explicit case to the Editor explaining why they are unable to meet the extra cost. References The Harvard system of references is preferred. References should be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the main text. Please include the article title in the reference, which should be in the order: author’s surname, initials; year in parentheses; article title; journal name, abbreviated in accordance with the World List of Scientific Periodicals (4th Edn); volume number (underlined); inclusive page numbers. Citations in the text Any of the following three ways of citing a 1992 paper by A. European may be used: European (1992); European [Eu]; or European [7]. In the second case, the reference at the end of the text should be preceded by [Eu], and in the third by [7]. Proof Reading Typographical or factual errors only may be changed at proof stage. The publisher reserves the right to charge authors for correction of non-typographical errors. No page charge is made. Incremental Publishing and DOIs The European Journal of Applied Mathematics now publishes articles incrementally online (at Cambridge Journals Online: journals.cambridge.org) as soon as author corrections have been completed and before they join a printed issue. A new reference has now been added to the first page of the article in the journal catchline. This is the DOI–The Digital Object Identifier. This is a global publishers?standard. A unique DOI number is created for each published item. It can be used for citation purposes instead of volume, issue and page numbers. It therefore suits the early citation of articles which are published on the web before they have appeared in a printed issue. http://www.journals.cambridge.org/jid-EJM Offprints No paper offprints will be supplied. Each author will have access to electronic offprints in pdf form. Editorial note Following recent developments in electronic publishing at Cambridge University Press, we are pleased to announce that starting with the Volume 12, Part 5 issue of European Journal of Applied Mathematics, each article and book review will be annotated with a digital object identifier (DOI). A DOI gives each article and book review a code made up of a Cambridge University Press Prefix and a unique numerical identifier number, which is a code increasingly in use for items published on the web. Such articles and book reviews can then be referenced and retrieved as separate items. DOIs will also be useful for citing and identifying individual articles as separate entities, without the need to list specific journal, volume or issue details. (Revised 26/9/2007)
Instructions to Authors
instructions for author.pdf
Editorial Board
Editorial Board Co-Editors-in-Chief Professor S D Howison Mathematical Institute 24-29 St Giles OXFORD OX1 3LB ejam@maths.ox.ac.uk Professor AA Lacey Department of Mathematics Heriot-Watt University Riccarton EDINBURGH EH14 4AS
a.a.Lacey@ma.hw.ac.uk Professor MJ Ward Department of Mathematics 121-1984 Mathematics Rd University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CANADA V6T 1Z2 ward@math.ubc.ca Editorial Board Professor N Balmforth Department of Mathematics, Building 229C, University of British Columbia, Vancouver BC, CANADA V6T 1Z2.
njb@math.ubc.ca Professor R Caflisch Department of Mathematics UCLA Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA caflisch@math.ucla.edu Professor Z Chen Institute of Computational Mathematics Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100080, CHINA zmchen@lsec.cc.ac.cn Professor PA Clarkson Institute of Mathematics & Statistics University of Kent at Canterbury Cornwallis Building Canterbury KENT p.a.clarkson@ukc.ac.uk Professor A Goriely Department of Mathematics Building #89 University of Arizona Tucson AZ 85721 USA goriely@math.arizona.edu Professor M Herrero Dept de Matematica Aplicada Facultad de Matematicas Universidad Complutense Ciudad Universitaria s/n 28040 Madrid SPAIN herrero@mat.ucm.es Professor JR King Department of Theoretical Mechanics University of Nottingham University Park NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD john.king@nottingham.ac.uk Professor Y Nishiura Laboratory of Nonlinear Studies and Computations Research Institute for Electronic Science Hokkaido University N12 W6 Sapporo 060-0812 JAPAN nishiura@aurora.es.hokudai.ac.jp Dr JR Ockendon Mathematical Institute University of Oxford 24-29 St Giles OXFORD OX1 3LB ock@maths.ox.ac.uk Professor M Pugh Department of Mathematics University of Toronto 40 St George St, Room 6290, Toronto, Ontario CANADA M5S 2E4
mpugh@math.toronto.edu Professor V V Pukhnachov Laurentyev Institute of Hydrodynamics Siberian Division of Russian Academy of Sciences Novosibirsk 630090 RUSSIA pukh@hydro.nsc.ru Professor J Rubinstein Department of Mathematics Technion Haifa 32000 ISRAEL
koby@math.technion.ac.il Professor F Santosa School of Mathematics University of Minnesota 127 Vincent Hall 206 Church Street SE Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA santosa@math.umn.edu Professor TP Witelski Mathematical Institute University of Oxford 24-29 St Giles OXFORD OX1 3LB.
witelski@maths.ox.ac.uk Professor P. Bressloff Department of Mathematics 155 South 1400 East 233 JWB University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT 8411 USA Professor Paul Dellar Oxford Centre for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (OCIAM) Mathematical Institute 24-29 St Giles' Oxford OX1 3LB United Kingdom Professor Rachel Kuske Department of Mathematics University of British Columbia #121-1984 Mathematics Road Vancouver BC V6T 1Z2
Professor Mark Peletier Department of Mathematics Technical University of Eindhoven Den Dolech 2 P.O. Box 513 5600 MB EINDHOVEN The Netherlands Survey Editor Professor Dr Peter A. Markowich Institut für Mathematik Universität Wien Bolzmanngasse 9 A-1090 Wien Austria
peter.markowich@univie.ac.at Professor Robert M. Mattheij Department of Mathematics & Computer Science TU Eindhoven PO Box 513 NL-5600 MB Eindhoven The Netherlands mattheij@win.tue.nl Professor Joyce McLaughlin Department of Mathematical Sciences Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy NY 12180 USA mclauj@rpi.edu
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