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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL PHYSICS
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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Journal of Statistical Physics publishes original and review papers in the fields of statistical mechanics and thermodynamics of equilibrium and nonequilibrium processes. Papers on plasma physics, nonlinear dynamics, biology, stochastic processes, fluid dynamics, and chemical physics are also accepted provided they are of general interest in relating macroscopic behavior to microscopic interactions. |
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Instructions to Authors
- It is preferred that manuscripts be submitted electronically. They should be e-mailed to jsp@math.rutgers.edu, as an attachment to the letter of submittal, in a single ps file, including figures (see 10. below). An alternative possibility is to post the manuscript at an accessible archive and send us a message of submittal with the appropriate reference; we will then retrieve the manuscript directly from there. Manuscripts may also be submitted as hard copies, double spaced, in triplicate (using 8 1/2 ?11 inch white paper), to
Prof. Joel L. Lebowitz Editor, Journal of Statistical Physics Center for Mathematical Sciences Research Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 110 Frelinghuysen Road–Room 612 Piscataway, NJ 08854-8019
If you have any questions about the submission of a manuscript, please communicate with Joel Lebowitz at the above address or:
lebowitz@math.rutgers.edu Telephone: 732-445-3117 Fax: 732-445-4936
- Authors are encouraged to send an additional copy of their manuscript to an associate editor or to a board member familiar with the topic of the paper. When this is done it should be so indicated in the letter of submission to the Editor. In general it is desirable for authors to include in the submittal letter a list of five or six suitable referees (with e-mail addresses if possible).
- Submission is a representation that the manuscript has not been published previously and is not currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. A statement of consent to publish and/or transfer of copyright from the authors (or their employers, if they hold the copyright) to Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers will be required before the manuscript can be published. You can download the Consent to Publish and Transfer of Copyright Form here. The transferring of copyright does not interfere with an authors?posting of the article, prior to publication, to the Los Alamos archive or similar archives, or the authors?use of the material in their own work with appropriate acknowledgment.
- A title page is to be provided and should include the title of the article, author‘s name (no degrees), 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 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 author designated to review proofs. Proofs will be e-mailed as PDF attachments.
- Please provide an abstract, preferably no longer than 150 words, and a list of 4-5 key words (directly below the abstract). Key words are used for indexing purposes.
- References should be listed numerically or alphabetically at the end of each paper and preferably should include titles of papers and first and last page. Use the appropriate superscript numeral in parentheses or square brackets for citation in the text.
- 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 without parentheses for citation in the text.
- Illustrations (photographs, drawings, diagrams, and charts) are to be numbered in one consecutive series of Arabic numerals. All illustrations must be camera ready. Photographs should be large, glossy prints, showing high contrast. Line art should be high-quality laser prints. Either the original line art or good-quality photographic prints are acceptable. Each figure should be on a separate page. Photographs and other illustrations sent by mail should have the author‘s name and figure number on the back. Tables should be numbered (with Roman numerals) and referred to by number in the text. Each table should be on a separate sheet of paper. Separate pages with captions for figures and with captions for tables should precede the figures and tables.
- In general, the journal follows the recommendations of the American Institute of Physics in its Style Manual, and it is suggested that contributors consult this publication.
- Once the paper is accepted, a final double spaced version in the form described above will be requested from the authors. This should preferably be in an electronic form and should consist of text in one file, in any format which can be manipulated by the printer (not a ps file). Figures and tables should be sent in a separate ps file. An additional ps file of the text would also be helpful. Kluwer style files were created for use with journals produced in the Netherlands and, as such, are not appropriate for manuscript submissions to Journal of Statistical Physics. Please see the journal‘s homepage for guidelines for authors using LaTeX.
- The journal makes no page charges. Reprints are available to authors, and order forms with the current price schedule are sent with proofs.
- Books (including conference proceedings) for review should be sent to:
Dr. George H. Weiss Division of Computer Research & Technology National Institutes of Health 12A/2007 Bethesda, Maryland 20892
E-mail: ghw@helix.nih.gov
- 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. These settings are appropriate for 10-point type. If you are using a different type size, adjust the text width accordingly.
- 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. Extra packages should be limited to the minimum: Authors may use REVTeX 4. This version of REVTeX is fully compatible with LaTeX2e. AMS-LaTeX is generally well-supported for heavy math. Avoid using plain-TeX commands like \over and \atop.
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief: Joel L. Lebowitz Center for Mathematical Sciences Research, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, USA
Assistant to the Editor: Judy Ann Williamson, Center for Mathematical Research, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway Associate Editors: John Cardy, University of Oxford, UK; Eric Carlen, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta; Bernard Derrida, ENS, Paris, France; Herbert Spohn, TU München, Germany Editorial Board: Michael Aizenman, Princeton University, NJ; Kurt Binder, Johannes-Gütenberg-Universität, Mainz, Germany; Jean Bricmont, FYMA, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; Eric A. Carlen, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta; Pierre Collet, CNRS-Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau, France; Françoise Cornu, Universit?de Paris, Orsay, France; D. Dhar, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, India; Eytan Domany, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel; M.R. Evans, The University of Edinburgh, UK; Pierre Gaspard, Universit?Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium; H.-O. Georgii, University of Munich, Germany; Sheldon Goldstein, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway; Hans-Rudolf Jauslin, Universit?de Bourgogne, Dijon, France; Michael Kiessling, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway; Joachim Krug, Universität GH Essen, Germany; Claudio Landim, IMPA and CNRS UPRES-A 6085, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Rouen, France; Christian Maes, Instituut voor Theoretische Fysica, Leuven, Belgium; Rosanna Marra, Universit?di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy; Marc Mezard, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de Lens, Paris, France; Mark Mineev-Weinstein, Los Alamos National Laboratory, NM; R. Minlos, Dobrushin Mathematical Laboratory, Institute for Information, Moscow, Russia; Paul A. Pearce, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, Victoria, Australia; Oliver Penrose, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK; Jerome K. Percus, Courant Institute and Physics Dept., New York; Sidney Redner, Boston University, MA; Howard Reiss, Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Los Angeles, CA; Alberto Robledo, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico; David Ruelle, Bures-sur-Yvette, France; Michael Schick, University of Washington, Seattle; Ya. Sinai, Princeton University, NJ; Daniel L. Stein, University of Arizona, Tucson; George H. Weiss, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; Horng-Tzer Yau, New York University; Lai-Sang Young, New York University; Milos Zharadnik, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic; R.K.P. Zia, Virginia Polytechnic and State University, Blacksburg
Book Review Editor: George H. Weiss, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
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