期刊名称:JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY AND ELECTRONICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
The journal examines a broad spectrum of theoretical, fundamental, and applied issues of radio engineering, communication, and electron physics. It publishes original papers from the leading scientific and research centers. The journal covers all essential branches of electromagnetics, wave propagation theory, signal processing, transmission lines, telecommunications, physics of semiconductors, and physical processes in electron devices, as well as applications in biology, medicine, microelectronics, nanoelectronics, electron and ion emission, etc.
Instructions to Authors
Dear author,
In order to simplify the procedure of interaction between an author (coauthors) and the publisher we ask you to send agreements on transfer of copyright (in Russian or in English) simultaneously with the manuscript of the article to the editorial board of the journal. The agreement should be sent in duplicate.
This agreement is a contract of adhesion.
We draw your attention to the fact that the agreement enters into force under the condition of acceptance of an article for publication in English. If for any reason your article is refused by the editorial board of the journal, the agreement automatically loses force. The decision on acceptance of an article for publication is the exclusive right of the editorial board of the journal. Signing of the agreement by an author (coauthors) means that the author (coauthors) has acquainted himself (themselves) and agrees (agree) with the conditions of the agreement.
A copyright transfer agreement form can be downloaded at our site:
Model Author's Agreement Form
The completed and signed agreements may be presented in person or sent to the editorial board of the journal:
- by post
- by e-mail (PDF file) or fax; the original must be subsequently mailed by post.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS
download the file in .pdf format guidelines.pdf
Dear authors: The editorial board asks you to use the following guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts:
- Manuscripts should be double-spaced and should use a 14-point font.
- The title page should include the PACS numbers according to the Physics and Astronomy Classification Scheme (PACS).
- The paper title should not contain any acronyms or abbreviations, even most widespread ones (TWT, emf). However, acronyms and abbreviations are allowed in the abstract and in the text, where they must be explained after their first usage.
- The paper’s abstract (without the word abstract) should be placed before the main text of the paper. The abstract should contain five to six sentences beginning with words it is shown, obtained, investigated, predicted, etc.
- If the paper is separated into sections, the authors are advised to use the following rule: INTRODUCTION (not numbered), 1. SECTION TITLE, 2. SECTION TITLE, … CONCLUSIONS (also not numbered), REFERENCES, and Figure captions (on a separate sheet). If figures have no captions, the authors should enclose a sheet with the following text: “Figure captions for the paper [the surname of the first author, the title] Fig. 1, Fig. 2, …, Fig. N.” If the paper contains only one figure, a figure caption is mandatory. In this case, the figure is not numbered and is referred to as figure in the text. Similarly, if the paper contains only one table, a table heading is mandatory. This table is referred to as table in the text. If the paper contains two or more tables, the tables may contain no headings. In the text of a paper containing several tables, the tables are referred to as Table 1, Table 2, etc. The editorial board asks the authors to pay special attention to the fact that figures and tables should be printed on separate sheets, not in the body of the text. The authors are asked to mark the first appearance of each figure or table in the left margin with a pencil as follows: Fig.1, Table 2, etc.
If it is necessary to divide sections into subsections, the subsections should be marked with Latin letters and written in italic, for example: 1. SECTION TITLE, A. Subsection Title, B. Subsection Title, …, Z. Subsection Title. If it is necessary to divide subsections into sub-subsections, the corresponding titles should go into the beginning of a paragraph and should be written in Italic. Numbering of type 1, 1.1., 1.2.1 is prohibited. All formulas must be numbered successively throughout the paper, without separation into sections. However, separated numbering of “subformulas” such as (5a), (5b), … or (5), (5'), (5"), … is allowed. If the paper contains APPENDIX (APPENDICES) with formulas, these formulas are numbered sequentially throughout all appendices, for example, (A.1), (A.2), etc.
- The following rules apply for references to journlas:
- Author’s initials go before the surname with a space between the initials. Use and between the last two authors. If more than four authors, use et al. after the third author instead of naming the remaining authors.
- The name of the journal is written in the standard CASSI-abbreviated form in plain text instead of italics.
- The volume number follows the journal title in bold without a preceding comma and without the word vol.
- If the page numbering is continuous throughout the volume, the issue number is not indicated. In this case, the first page number of the article follows the volume number separated by a comma but without the word p. If the page numbering is not continuous, the issue number is written in parentheses in plain text following the volume number with a comma placed after the issue number, followed by the page number. In both cases, the year of publication follows the page number in parentheses.
- If the volume number is missing, the issue number is indicated instead as shown by the following example: J. Appl. Phys., No. 12, 5151 (1973).
- For a Russian journal previously translated by AIP and now translated by MAIK Nauka/Interperiodica, the translation journal should be cited in square brackets following the original journal.
- All journals that are listed in CASSI should be abbreviated as they appear there. If a journal is not listed, the authors may abbreviate the title based on a similar journal abbreviation. If the title is written out in full because no abbreviated title is listed in CASSI, the title should follow English capitalization rules.
The following rules apply to references to books:
- Authors are cited in the same way as in references to journals, with the exception that all authors are indicated.
- The title of the book is written in italics.
- If the book is published in Russian, only the English translation of the title is cited.
- Any subsequent edition after the first edition is mentioned following the title.
- The publication information follows the title (and edition) in parentheses in the order publisher, city, year. The publisher’s name is generally written in a standard shortened form.
- Volume number (Vol.), part number (Part), chapter number (Chap.), and page numbers (pp.) follow the publication information.
The following format applies for references to inventor’s certificates and patents: (1) Name of patent holder, (2) Number of patent or inventor’s certificate, (3) Date of patent, (4) Publication in which patent was published, (5) volume number, (6) issue number, (7) year of publication.
The following national abbreviations are commonly used in patent citations: SU (Soviet Union), RF (Russian Federation), EC (European Community), FR (France), DE (Germany), JP (Japan), UK (United Kingdom), and US (United States).
The following format applies to references to meeting papers:
- Author’s initials go before the surname with a space between the initials.
- The title of a conference (in the abbreviated form, for example, Proc. Conf.) and its place and date are italicized.
- Publication information (name, city, and year) follows in parentheses.
- The first page number of the cited material is then given separated by a comma.
The title of the paper is not presented.
- All symbols in formulas and in the text must be marked in accordance with the following rules: all subscripts and superscripts are marked by arcs with black pencil, Greek letters are underlined with red pencil. (Only φ and ψ lowercase letters and Φ and Ψ uppercase letters should be used.) Letters with similar shape should be marked with two lines over the letter for lowercase letters and two lines under the letter for capital letters, for example, letters
and , and , and , and , and , and , and , and and . Latin letters whose shape is similar to Cyrillic letters must be underlined by a wavy line with black pencil, for example, Latin letters and , and , , and , and , and , , and .
Physical (and mathematical) vectors are set up with a standard (not boldface) font and are marked with arrow placed over the symbol either using the corresponding computer symbol or by hand with pen (not pencil!). In the printed text, all variables denoted by Latin letters will be printed in italic.
In the printed text, letters denoting matrices are printed in Roman boldface. These letters should be underlined with blue pencil in the manuscript.
Script letters can be used to denote mathematical spaces, classes of functions, and some special functions. Only capital Latin letters can be used for this purpose. These letters must be encircled (not underlined!) with yellow pencil in the manuscript.
Only capital Gothic letters can be used. These letters are encircled (not underlined!) with blue pencil in the manuscript.
Names of chemical elements are underlined by a square bracket. Similarly, all standard mathematical functions and operations (curl, div, grad, Re, Im, lim, sin, tan, arctan, exp, Si, sn, dn, max, min, sup, inf, etc.) are underlined by a square bracket. An exponential dependence must be written as exp(@). Figure 0 (zero) appearing in the right-hand sides of equations or equalities or used as an index is also underlined by a square bracket. If 0 appears as part of a number, for example, 100, 90, or 0.01, symbol 0 is not underlined.
- All indices representing abbreviations (input, output, incident, reflected, minimal, maximal, etc.) should be underlined by a square bracket.
- All units of measurement (V, eV, kA, Ω, MW, dB, J, s, K, rel. units, deg, min, rad, etc.) are underlined by a square bracket. Value 0 (zero) is unitless; therefore, its unit of measure is not indicated. All vertical lines (symbols of the absolute value, values of derivatives, etc.) are also underlined by a square bracket.
- Ranges of values are designated by leadering (@) rather than by en dash (–), for example, 10 × 24 MHz or 0.14 × 1.23 cm. Exceptions are references to figures (Figs. 1–4), formulas (2)–(5), and dates (February 2–6).
- Explanations in figures are not allowed. All explanations should be given in figure captions. Curves are numbered by the numbers underlined by a wavy line. If experimental curves are marked with triangles, squares, circles, etc., these curves must be described in the main text or in the caption to the corresponding figure. If curves go very close to each other and they are difficult to mark with numbers, the numbered fragments of these curves should be given in an inset. Components of large circuits or elements of large diagrams are also numbered with figures that are explained in the corresponding figure captions.
The use in figures of symbol 0.0, which is available in some graphic editors, is prohibited. Only symbol 0 should be used. If the vertical and horizontal axes have coinciding zero origins, one figure 0 should be placed.
- The editorial board asks the authors to pay attention to the spelling of some surnames and their derivatives. For example, such terms as Gaussian process or Poisson distribution should be used.
- Acknowledgments to persons should be placed at the end of the paper. Only surnames and initials without academic titles should be mentioned.
- Acknowledgments to organizations funding the study should be placed before the list of references and should follow the following format: “This study was supported (in part) by the [full name of the fund, organization, @], grant (project) no. @.”
Editorial Board
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Yurii V. Gulyaev Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Director of the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS)
DEPUTY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Vladislav I. Pustovoit Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
EXECUTIVE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Alexander O. Raevskii Cand. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia
EDITORIAL BOARD Andrei F. Alexandrov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Alexander S. Bugaev, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Academician of the RAS, Institute of Physics and Technology, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir A. Cherepenin, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Anatolii S. Il’inskii, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Valery A. Kashin, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), ALMAZ Central Design Bureau, Russia; Boris Z. Katsenelenbaum, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Moscow, Russia; Vladimir V. Kislov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Alexander A. Kuriksha, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., International Academic Company “Vympel”, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir E. Lubchenko, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Dmitry S. Lukin, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Physics&Technology, Moscow, Russia; Georgii D. Mansfel’d, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Sergey A. Nikitov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Corresponding Member of the RAS, Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Valerii V. Proklov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Alexander D. Shatrov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Viktor V. Shevchenko, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Yurii S. Shinakov, Dr. Sci. (Techn.), Prof., Moscow Institute of Communications and Informatics, Moscow, Russia; Andrei V. Sokolov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Viktor A. Solntsev, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Moscow State Institute of Mathematics and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Yurii G. Sosulin, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Moscow State Aviation Institute, Moscow, Russia; Anatolii V. Vashkovskii, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia; Michael S. Yarlykov, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy, Moscow, Russia; Peter E. Zil’berman, Dr. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), Prof., Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Moscow, Russia
STAFF EDITOR: Svetlana V. Zenovich
EDITORS OF THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION: Aleksandr S. Kondrat'ev, Cand. Sci. (Eng.) and Irina G. Efimova, Cand. Sci. (Eng.)
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