Forum of Mathematics
Language | English |
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'Forum of Mathematics, Pi' and 'Forum of Mathematics, Sigma' are open-access peer-reviewed journals for mathematics licensed under creative commons and published by Cambridge University Press.[1] The journals opened to submissions on 1 October 2012 and their first article was published online on 17 May 2013.[2] It is intended to be funded by an author-pays model with fee-waivers for those that can't afford the fees, and no fees at all for any author for the journals' first three years.
The founding managing editor was Rob Kirby (University of California, Berkeley), and is currently Robert Guralnick.[3][4]
Unlike traditional journals there are no issues as all articles will be available online as soon as they are accepted, although at the end of each year a collected volume will be available as print-on-demand.
Pi is for general articles of interest to a wide audience of mathematicians, and Sigma is for specialist articles with a group of editors for different areas of mathematics. Articles that don't fit neatly into the classification of areas used by the editorial process are still welcome.
References
- ↑ Forum of Mathematics, Pi and Forum of Mathematics, Sigma
- ↑ Scholze, Peter (2013), "p-adic Hodge theory for rigid-analytic varieties", Forum of Mathematics, Pi, 1: 2013e1, doi:10.1017/fmp.2013.1;
Popa, Mihnea; Schnell, Christian (2013), "Generic vanishing theory via mixed Hodge modules", Forum of Mathematics, Sigma, 1: 2013e1, doi:10.1017/fms.2013.1. - ↑ http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayMoreInfo?jid=FMP&type=eb
- ↑ http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayMoreInfo?jid=FMS&type=eb
External links
- Maths journals open up, Bernard Lane, The Australian, 6 July 2012
- A new open-access venture from Cambridge University Press, Tim Gowers, 2 July 2012
- Forum of Mathematics, Pi and Forum of Mathematics, Sigma, Terry Tao, 2 July 2012
- Math 2.0: Journals: launch of Forum of Mathematics
- Cambridge University Press Launches Open Access Maths Journals, "News and Views" item at The Funneled Web, 6 July 2012
- The Forum of Mathematics, blessing or curse?, Peter Krautzberger, 2012/11/11