Random Matrices: Theory and Applications, publishes high quality papers on all aspects regarding random matrices, both theory and applications. These areas will include, but not be limited to, spectral theory, new ensembles (those not generally considered in classical random matrix theory), and applications to a wide variety of areas, including high dimensional data analysis, wireless communications, finance, and economics. Only papers that contain original, innovative and correct results, which deepen our understanding on the theory of random matrices and its applications, will be considered for publications.
An acceptable paper should contain a well-written non-technical introduction to the subject that the paper seeks to address, and also a summary of the results to be proved in later sections. The introduction should include a detailed background description, and due credit should be assigned in a comprehensive reference section. Papers which focus on applications of random matrix theory should have a clear link to random matrix theory and solve key problems in their respective areas using the tools of random matrix theory.
Re-working on old problems and papers that simply contain a technical discussion without clear innovations will not be considered for publication, unless new innovative and useful methodologies are created. All known results should be named by "propositions" and cited by a clear reference; "theorems" can only be used for creative results of the paper. All submitted papers will be first screened by one of the chief editors and then assigned to an associate editor. All editors have right to reject and/or accept papers without sending to referees and all associate editors have a right to recommend rejection and/or acceptance of papers without sending them to referees by their own judgments.
Authors should submit their papers electronically with LaTeX via Editorial Manager (EM), a fully web-based submission, peer-review and tracking system, at http://www.editorialmanager.com/rmta/login.asp
Submission of a paper implies that it has not been published, and is not being considered for publication in another journal. Once a paper has been accepted for publication in RMTA, the author is assumed to have transferred the copyright to the publisher. All submitted papers will be acknowledged and refereed.
An acceptable paper should contains a well written non-technical introduction to the subject that the paper seeks to address, and also a summary of the results to be proved in later sections. The introduction should include a detailed background description, and due credit should be assigned in a comprehensive reference section. Papers which focus on applications of random matrix theory should have a clear link to random matrix theory and solve key problems in their respective areas using the tools of random matrix theory.
Re-working on old problems and papers that simply contain a technical discussion without clear innovations will not be considered for publication, unless new innovative and useful methodologies are created. All known results should be named by "propositions" and cited by a clear reference; "theorems" can only be used for creative results of the paper. All submitted papers will be first screened by one of chief editors and then assigned to an associate editor. All editors have right to reject and/or accept papers without sending to referees and all associate editors have a right to recommend rejection and/or acceptance of papers without sending them to referees by their own judgments.
There will be no page charge for the journal. The authors can consult the the Instructions for typesetting the manuscripts using LaTeX for detailed information on the style. Plain LaTeX or AMS-LaTeX are acceptable, but the authors are also encouraged to use the journal's own RMTA style files (click here to download the style files).
Editorial Board
Editors-in-Chief
Zhidong Bai (Founding Editor) School of Mathematics and Statistics Northeast Normal University, China
Yang Chen (Founding Editor) University of Macau Macau, China
Associate Editors-in-Chief
Mérouane Debbah (Supélec, France) Alan Edelman (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA) Ying-Chang Liang (Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore) Qi-Man Shao (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
Editorial Board
Mark Adler (Brandeis University, USA) Estelle Basor (American Institute of Mathematics, USA) Pavel Bleher (Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, USA) Gordon Blower (Lancaster University, UK) Torsten Ehrhardt (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA) Betrand Eynard (Institute of Theoretical Physics, CEA-Saclay, France) Peter Forrester (The University of Melbourne, Australia) Tamara Grava (SISSA, Trieste, Italy) Andrei Martínez-Finkelshtein (University of Almeria, Spain) Matthew Mckay (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong) Maciej A. Nowak (Jagiellonian University, Poland) Guangming Pan (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) Jack Silverstein (North Carolina State University, USA) Roland Speicher (Queen's University, Canada) Craig Tracy (University of California, Davis, USA) Dan Voiculescu (University of California, Berkeley, USA) Van H Vu (Rutgers University, USA) Harold Widom (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA) Jian-Feng Yao (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong) Wang Zhou (National University of Singapore, Singapore)