期刊名称:JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING

ISSN:0885-7474
出版频率:Continuous publication
出版社:SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS, 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10013
  出版社网址:http://www.springer.com/?SGWID=8-102-0-0-0
期刊网址:http://www.springer.com/mathematics/computational+science+%26+engineering/journal/10915
影响因子:2.592
主题范畴:MATHEMATICS, APPLIED

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Description
Journal of Scientific Computing is an international interdisciplinary forum for the publication of papers on state-of-the-art developments in scientific computing and its applications in science and engineering.

The journal publishes high-quality, peer-reviewed original papers, review papers and short communications on scientific computing.
Impact Factor: 1.293 (2007)
Section "Mathematics, applied": Rank 24 of 165
Abstracted/Indexed in:
ACM Guide To Computing Literature, Boundary Elements Abstracts Newsletter, Compendex, COMPENDEX / Engineering Abstracts, Computer Abstracts International Database, Computer and Information Systems Abstracts, Electronics and Communications Abstracts, Inspec, Mathematical Reviews, PASCAL, Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch), SCOPUS, Zentralblatt Math

Instructions to Authors
Instructions for Authors
Journal of Scientific Computing


Online Manuscript Submission
Springer now offers authors, editors and reviewers of Journal of Scientific Computing the use of our fully web-enabled online manuscript submission and review system. To keep the review time as short as possible, we request authors to submit manuscripts online to the journal’s editorial office. Our online manuscript submission and review system offers authors the option to track the progress of the review process of manuscripts in real time. Click here to start the online submission process: http://jomp.edmgr.com


The online manuscript submission and review system for Journal of Scientific Computing offers easy and straightforward log-in and submission procedures. This system supports a wide range of submission file formats: for manuscripts –Word, WordPerfect, RTF, TXT and LaTex; for figures ?TIFF, GIF, JPEG, EPS, PPT, and Postscript. PDF is not anacceptable file format.

NOTE: In case you encounter any difficulties while submitting your manuscript online, please get in touch with the responsible Editorial Assistant by clicking on ‘‘CONTACT US’’ from the tool bar.
Publication Policies
Submission is a representation that the manuscript has not been published previously and is not currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. A statement transferring copyright from the authors (or their employers, if they hold the copyright) to Springer will be required before the manuscript can be accepted for publication. The Editors will supply the necessary forms for this transfer. Such a written transfer of copyright, which previously was assumed to be implicit in the act of submitting a manuscript, is necessary under the U.S. Copyright Law in order for the publisher to carry through the dissemination of research results and reviews as widely and effectively as possible.
Manuscript Style
Type double-spaced.

Title Page

A title page is to be provided and should include



the title of the article


author's name


title


author's affiliation


and suggested running head


The affiliation should comprise



the department


institution (usually university or company)


city


and state (or nation)


and should be typed as a footnote to the author's name. The suggested running head should be less than 80 characters (including spaces) and should comprise the article title or an abbreviated version thereof. For office purposes, the title page should include the complete



mailing address


telephone number


fax number


and e−mail address


of the one author designated to review proofs. Proofs will be e−mailed as PDF attachments.

Abstract



An abstract is to be provided, preferably no longer than 100?50 words


Key Words



A list of 4? key words is to be provided directly below the abstract. Key words should express the precise content of the manuscript, as they are used for indexing purposes.


Sections



All sections should be numbered with Arabic numerals (such as 1. INTRODUCTION). Subsections should be identified with section and subsection numbers (such as 6.1. Second−Value Subheading). If applicable, an independent single−number system (one for each category) should be used to label all theorems, lemmas, propositions, corollaries, definitions, remarks, examples, etc. The label (such as Theorem 4) should be typed with paragraph indentation, followed by a period and the theorem itself.


Mathematical Notation



Mathematical notation should be typewritten wherever possible. If handwritten notation must be used, it should be clear and legible, with any necessary explanatory notes located in the margin. Equations should be numbered consecutively by section with Arabic numerals in parentheses placed flush right, and should be thusly referred to in the text [such as Eqs. (2.1) and (2.2)].




Illustration Style
Illustrations



Illustrations (photographs, drawings, diagrams, and charts) are to be numbered in one consecutive series of Arabic numerals. The captions for illustrations should be typed on a separate sheet of paper. All illustrations must be complete and final, i.e., camera−ready Reproduction of illustrations in color is possible by special arrangement, with the total cost, which is significant, borne by the author. Electronic artwork submitted on disk should be in TIFF or EPS format (1200 dpi for line and 300 dpi for half-tones and gray-scale art). Color art should be in the CMYK color space.


Tables



Tables should be numbered (with Roman numerals) and referred to by number in the text. Each table should be typed on a separate sheet of paper.


References

List references alphabetically at the end of the paper. Use the appropriate numeral in brackets on the baseline for citation in the text. The style and punctuation of the references should conform to that used in the journal ?illustrated by the following examples:



Journal Article
1. Luciani, J.F., and Mora, P. (1986). Resummation methods of the Chapman−Enskog expansion for a strongly inhomogeneous plasma. J. Stat. Phys. 43, 281−302.


Book
2. Wilson, S. (1986). Chemistry by Computer: An Overview of the Applications of Computers in Chemistry, Plenum Press, New York.


Contribution to a Book
3. Kagiwada, H., and Kalaba, R. (1979). Imbedding methods for integral equations with applications. In Goldberg, M. A. (ed.), Solution Methods for Integral Equations: Theory and Applications, Plenum Press, New York, pp. 195−223.


Footnotes



Footnotes should be avoided. When their use is absolutely necessary, footnotes should be numbered consecutively using Arabic numerals and should be typed at the bottom of the page to which they refer. Place a line above the footnote, so that it is set off from the text. Use the appropriate superscript numeral for citation in the text.
Page Charges
The journal makes no page charges. Reprints are available to authors, and order forms with the current price schedule are sent with proofs.
Springer Open Choice
Springer Open Choice: In addition to the normal publication process (whereby an article is submitted to the journal and access to that article is granted to customers who have purchased a subscription), Springer now provides an alternative publishing option:


Springer Open Choice. A Springer Open Choice article receives all the benefits of a regular subscription–based article, but in addition is made available publicly through Springers online platform SpringerLink. To publish via Springer Open Choice, upon acceptance please visit the link below to complete the relevant order form and provide
the required payment information. Payment must be received in full before publication or articles will publish as regular subscription–model articles. We regret that Springer Open Choice cannot be ordered for published articles.
Guidelines for Authors Using LaTeX


Use standard LaTeX2e as much as possible.


After the initial \documentclass{article} line, add the following:

−− \setlength{\textwidth}{27pc}
−− \setlength{\textheight}{43pc}

This will format the pages to the journal's size; this is useful to decide where to break long formulas and as an estimation of the number of printed pages.


If the article contains theorems and lemmas, etc., add the following:

−− \usepackage{theorem}
−− \theorembodyfont{\upshape}
before defining the theorems and lemmas, etc; for example:
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
etc....

This will keep the text of the theorems in roman, rather than the standard italic.

Editorial Board
Editorial Board

Editors-in-Chief:

Chi-Wang Shu
Brown University, Providence, RI, USA
Finite difference and finite element methods for PDE; computational fluid dynamics

Christine Bernardi
CNRS and Universit?Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France
Numerical analysis of spectral, finite element and mortar discretization

Associate Editors:

David Gottlieb
Brown University, Providence, RI, USA
Spectral and high order finite difference methods for time dependent systems

Bertil Gustafsson
Uppsala University, Sweden
Difference methods for time-dependent PDE; computational wave propagation and fluid dynamics

Yvon Maday
CNRS and Universit?Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France
Spectral and spectral element methods

Steven A. Orszag
Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
Scientific computing, numerical analysis, applied mathematics, fluid mechanics

Editorial Board:

Mohamed Amara
IPRA Laboratoire de Mathématiques Appliquées, Pau, France
Finite element and finite volume methods for PDE; porous media and multiphase flows

Rémi Abgrall
Universit?de Bordeaux, France
Finite difference and finite element methods for PDE; computational fluid dynamics; hyperbolic problems; multiphase and interface problems; Hamilton Jacobi equations

Claude Basdevant
MD/ENS, Paris, France
Computational fluid dynamics; turbulence; geophysical flows; wavelets

Jacques Blum
Universit?de Nice-Sophia-Antipolis, France
Inverse problems; data assimilation for environmental problems; optimal control of PDE; plasma physics; oceanography

Claudio Canuto
Politecnico di Torino, Italy
Spectral methods; wavelet methods for PDEs; stabilized finite element methods

Mark Carpenter
NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA
Finite difference and time integration methods for PDE's; computational fluid dynamics

Bernardo Cockburn

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Finite element methods; nonlinear conservation laws; computational fluid flow; computational structural mechanics

Ronald Fedkiw
Stanford University, CA
Level set methods; interfaces; computational fluid dynamics

Uriel Frisch
Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, Nice, France
Spectral and other high-precision methods for tackling singularities in PDEs

Daniele Funaro
Universit?di Modena, Italy
Spectral and collocation methods for PDEs; domain decomposition; preconditioning

Anne Gelb
Arizona State University, AZ
Finite difference and spectral methods for solving PDEs; Gibbs phenomenon; edge detection from Fourier data

Roland Glowinski
University of Houston, TX
Finite element methods for PDEs; incompressible computational fluid dynamics; large scale numerical optimization; numerical methods for the control of systems modeled by PDEs

Isaac Goldhirsch
Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Statistical mechanics; kinetic theory; elasticity; granular media; coarse-graining methods and DEM simulations

Sigal Gottlieb
University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, MA
Time discretization techniques; numerical methods for hyperbolic PDEs

Jan S. Hesthaven
Brown University, Providence, RI
High-order finite difference, finite elements, finite volume, and spectral methods for PDEs; Computational electromagnetics and plasma physics

Antony Jameson
Stanford University, CA
Computational fluid dynamics

Stanley Osher
UCLA, CA
Level set methods; PDE based image science; numerical solution of hyperbolic equations

Lothar Reichel
Kent State University, OH
Numerical linear algebra; computational issues in inverse problems

Marie-Madeleine Rohmer
Universit?Louis Pasteur, France
Computational chemistry; computational physics

Pierre Sagaut

LMM - UPMC/CNRS, Paris, France
Computational fluid dynamics; aeroacoustics; finite-difference/finite volume schemes; turbulence

Rémi Sentis
CEA/Bruyères (service SEL), France
Monte-Carlo methods for PDE; transport equations; modelling and numerical simulations for plasma physics; asymptotic analysis

Sauro Succi
Instituto Applicazioni del Calcolo, Rome, Italy
Computational kinetic theory and fluid dynamics

Masahisa Tabata
Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Finite element methods and finite difference methods for PDE; computational fluid dynamics, theory and application

Denis Talay
INRIA, France
Stochastic analysis; stochastic numerical analysis; stochastic modelling; financial mathematics

Tao Tang
The Hong Kong Baptist University
Adaptive grid methods; finite difference methods and spectral methods for PDEs

Roger Temam
Indiana University, IN
Classical and geophysical fluid dynamics

Ya-xiang Yuan
Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Optimization

Ye Zhou
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, CA
Turbulence; fluid dynamics; plasma physics


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