期刊名称:LASER AND PARTICLE BEAMS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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Laser and Particle Beams is an international journal which deals with the physics of intense laser and particle beams, the interaction of these beams with matter, and their applications. Research on pulse power technology associated with beam generation is also of strong interest. The journal is designed to aid scientists in the task of understanding and modeling basic phenomena in these fields. Subjects covered include the physics of high energy densities; non-LTE phenomena; hot dense matter and related atomic, plasma and hydrodynamic physics; intense sources of coherent radiation; high current particle accelerators; beam-wave interaction; and pulsed power technology. |
Instructions to Authors
Originality and Copyright To be considered for publication in Laser and Particle Beams a manuscript cannot have been publis hed previously, nor can it be under review for publication elsewhere. Papers with multiple authors are reviewed with the assumption that all authors have approved the submitted manuscript and concur in its submission to Laser and Particle Beams. A Transfer of Copyright Agreement must be executed before an article can be published. Government authors whose articles were created in the course of their employment must so certify in lieu of copyright transfer. Authors are responsible for obtaining written permission from the copyright owners to reprint any previously published material included in their article. Manuscript Submission and Review Manuscripts must be written in English. All manuscripts will be referred to acknowledged experts in the subject. Only those receiving favorable recommendations from the referees will be accepted for publication. Manuscripts may be sent to any Board member, an Associate Editor, or the Editor at: Dieter H.H. Hoffmann Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Institüt für Theoretische Physik Staudstrasse D-91058 Erlanger, Germany phone: +49 (0) 6159-71 2694 fax: +49 (0) 6159-71 2888 E-mail: LPB-editor@gsi.de An original and two copies should be submitted with the author’s full postal address, phone, fax, and email address, position and affiliations. Authors are urged to send in their final manuscripts on disks as well as a hard copy. The manuscript can be submitted on disk in Microsoft Word (MAC or IBM) or in any form of TeX. This increases the speed at which the manuscript can be prepared for publication (typeset). Saving your document in any other format will not be helpful to the typesetter. (You may email the manuscript and figures to our office, and if I can download it, I will save it on disk for you.) Manuscript Preparation and Style Paper should be typed in double spacing throughout, including tables, footnotes, references and legends to tables and figures. One side of the paper, only, should be used and there should be a margin of at least 2.5 cm all around. The position of tables and figures should be clearly indicated, in sequence, in the text. Tables, footnotes and legends to figures should be typed separately. Where it is essential for clear crossreferencing, particularly in mathematically -orientated material, paragraphs and subparagraphs may be numbered, and the decimal system should be used, i.e. 1.1.1., 1.1.2., etc. A short running title of not more than 40 characters (including spaces) should be indicated if the full title is longer than this. The name of the laboratory where the work has been carried out should be indicated on the title page and the full postal address for the despatch of proofs and offprints should be included on a separate page. Minor corrections to the manuscript may be typed or neatly printed in ink; retyping is required for significant changes. Numbers should be spelled out when they occur at the beginning of a sentence; use Arabic numerals elsewhere. Manuscript Elements and Order Unless there are obvious and compelling reasons for variation (e.g. review articles, Symposium Reports), manuscripts should be organized as follows: Title page. This is page 1. The title should be concise, informative, and free of abbreviations, chemical formulae, technical jargon, and esoteric terms. This page should include (a) the article’s full title, (b) names and affiliations of all authors, (c) the name, mailing address, and telephone number of the corresponding author, (d) the address for reprint requests if different from that of the corresponding author, (e) a short title of 50 characters or less, and (f) a list of the number of manuscript pages, number of tables, and number of figures. Abstract and keywords page. This is page 2 and should include (a) the article’s full title, (b) an abstract of no more than 300 words, and (c) up to 5 keywords or phrases that reflect the content and major thrust of the article. The abstract should give a succinct account of the objective, methods, results, and significance of the subject matter. Introduction. This section begins on page 3 and should clearly state the objective of the research in the context of previous work bearing directly on the subject. An extensive review of the literature is not usually appropriate. Citations in text. Customary abbreviations will be accepted and the authors are recommended to employ Système Internationale (SI/metric) units. Special and unusual symbols should be clearly identified, especially if handwritten. Spell out acronyms at first use, but use only acronyms thereafter. All equipment supplies and products stated in the article should have the manufacturer name and location identified at first mention. Tables. Tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals and each should be typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. All tables are to be grouped together after the references. A short explanatory title and column headings should make the table intelligible without reference to the text. All tables must be cited and their approximate positions indicated in the text. Figures and legends. Figures should be supplied no larger than 8 x 10" (approx. 200 x 250 mm) and must be camera-ready. Explanation and keys should, as far as possible, be placed in the legends. Photographs for halftone reproduction must be on white glossy paper. Figures should be composed to occupy a single column (8.3 cm) or two columns (17 cm) after reduction. Diagrams and illustrations musthave a professional appearance and be typed or drawn with sharp, black lettering to permit reduction. To assure legibility, letters, numbers, and symbols on figures should have a minimum height of 1 mm when reduced. Figures should be separate and not incorporated into the text copy. Artwork should normally be in black and white; if authors have color figures, the publisher will provide a price quotation for the additional production costs. All figures must be identified on the back with the short title of the paper, figure number, and figure orientation (top or bottom). Preferably, figures should be mounted on heavy sheets of the same size as the manuscript. Two complete sets of figures should be carefully packaged in protective envelopes, one to accompany each copy of the manuscript. Each figure must be cited and its approximate position clearly indicted within the text. Figures must be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals and be accompanied by a descriptive caption typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. The captions, collected at the end of the manuscript, should concisely describe the figure and identify any symbols and/or calibration bars. References. Entries should be listed alphabetically by lead author at the end of the paper. All authors?BR>names should be included, followed by the year of publication, the full title of the journal, volume, issue number, and inclusive page numbers. For books, the full title should be given, followed by the editors, volume number (if any), page numbers, publisher and place of publication. Citations in the text should read: Brown and Smith (1973), but (Brown & Smith, 1973). Where there are more than two authors the citation should read: Brown et al. (1973). The conventional Brown (1973a), Brown (1973b) should be used where more than one paper by the author(s) has appeared in the same year. Brief examples: Journal Basov, N.G., Popov, Yu.M. & Gus’kov, S.Yu. (1998). Phys. Rev. Lett. 65, 221-230. Magazine Segre, M.A. & Pitts, B.D. (1992, Sept.). Physics of Laser Plasma Interactions. Fusion Energy A13, 98- 109. Chapter in an Edited Book Langdon, C.D., Fray, E. & Glenn, J. (1993). Plasma equilibrium in a magnetic field. In Reviews of Plasma Physics, (Gold, H. and Yen, S., Eds.), Vol. 2, pp. 45-78. NewYork: Elsevier. Entire Book Arnold, C.D., Fray, E. & Glenn, J. (1993). Physics of Gravitating Systems. (Gray, H. and Quinn, S., Eds.) New York: John Wiley & Sons. Proceedings Cliffe, K.A., Kobine, J.J. & Mullin, T. (1992). The role of anomalous modes in the Taylor flow problem. Proc. Roy. Soc. London A 439, 341-357. Proceedings with Publisher Noted Mittal, S. & Fray, F. (1989). Laser driven instabilities in nuclear plasmas. Proc. Eleventh Int. Joint Conf. of Laser Produced Plasmas, pp. 1395-1401. Los Altos, CA: Morgan Kaufmann. Report Birney, A.J. & Hall, M.M. (1981). Early identification of flaws in Machine Design. Report No. 81-1501. Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Thesis Lee, M.C. & Riedel, J.D. (1991). Shock generation in a realistic equation of state model. PhD Thesis. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. The alphabetical list of references begins a new page, and must be typed double-spaced. Each in-text citation must have a corresponding reference and vice versa. List works by different authors who are cited within the same parentheses in chronological order, beginning with the earlier work. Journal titles should not be abbreviated. Only published articles and articles in press should appear in this list. Responsibility for the accuracy of references cited lies with the authors. Author biographies. Brief author biographies will be printed at the end of each book revie w; they should not exceed 100 words for each author. Copyediting and Page Proofs The publisher reserves the right to copyedit manuscripts to conform to the style of Laser and Particle Beams. The corresponding author will receive page proofs for final proofreading. No rewriting of the final accepted manuscript is permitted at the proof stage, and substantial changes may be charged to the authors. Offprints The corresponding author will receive 25 free article offprints. A form will accompany the page proofs allowing orders for complete copies of the issue and for the purchase of additional offprints. Offprint requirements of all coauthors should be included on this form. Orders received after issue printing will be subject to a 50% reprint surcharge.
Instructions to Authors
0263-0346.pdf
Editorial Board
Editor
Professor Dieter H. H. Hoffmann Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung mbH Planckstrasse 1 D-64292 Darmstadt Germany Email LPB-editor@gsi.de Emeritus Editor in Chief
Heinrich Hora Department of Theoretical Physics University of New South Wales POB 1, Kensington NSW 2033 Australia Emeritus Editor in Chiefs
George H. Miley Director, Fusion Studies Laboratory University of Illinois 103 S Goodwin Ave Urbana, IL 61801 USA Associate Editor (for Pulse Power)
J.P. Quintenz Sandia National Laboratories P O Box 5800, MS 1195 Albuquerque, NM 87185-1195 USA Associate Editor (for Japan)
C. Yamanaka Director Institute for Laser Technology Osaka University, Suita 565 Osaka Japan Editorial Board
E. M. Campbell General Atomics, USA
A. Caruso ENEA Frascati,
M. Decroisette Centre d’Etudes de Limeil-Valenton,
S Eliezer SOREO, Israel
A. A. Hauer Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
W. B. Herrmannsfeldt Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre, USA
G. Kessler Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Germany
Michael H. Key Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
M. Kristiansen Texas Technological University, USA
R. L. McCrory Laboratory for Laser Energetics University of Rochester, USA
G. A. Mesyats Institute for Electrophysics Sverdlovsk, Russia
J. Meyer-ter-Vehn Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik, Germany
P. Mulser Technische Hochschule Darmstadt, Germany
S. Nakai Institute for Laser Engineering Osaka University, Japan
A. Ng Teikyo University of Technology, Japan
K. Niu Teikyo University of Technology, Japan
A .A. Offenberger University of Alberta, Canada
D .D. Ryutov Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA Email ryutov1@llnl.gov
A. S. Shikanov P N Lebedev Physical Institute, Russia
V. F. Tarasenko High Current Electronics Institute,
A. V. Zrodnikov Institute of Physics and Power Engineering, Russia
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