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'''''Communications in Mathematical Physics''''' is published by [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]. The journal publishes papers in all fields of [[Mathematical Physics]], but its strength lies particularly in Analysis, Quantum Information and Relativity. It is considered the leading journal in the field.<br />
'''''Communications in Mathematical Physics''''' is published by [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]. The journal publishes papers in all fields of [[Mathematical Physics]], but its strength lies particularly in Analysis related to Condensed Matter Physics, Statistical Mechanics and Quantum Field Theory, and in Operator algebras, Quantum Information and Relativity. It is considered the leading journal in the field.<br />
Volume 1 (1965) through Volume 183 (1997) are currently available free of charge in electronic form via Project Euclid<ref name="Euclid">http://projecteuclid.org/DPubS?service=UI&version=1.0&verb=Display&handle=euclid.cmp Volumes available via Euclid</ref>, an non-profit organization initiated by Cornell University Library that makes a large number of math papers and books available for free in electronic form. This portion of the journal is provided through the publisher's generous support of the EMANI<ref>http://www.emani.org/ EMANI</ref> project, the Electronic Mathematical Archiving Network Initiative to support the long-term electronic preservation of mathematical publications.
Volume 1 (1965) through Volume 183 (1997) are currently available free of charge in electronic form via Project Euclid<ref name="Euclid">http://projecteuclid.org/DPubS?service=UI&version=1.0&verb=Display&handle=euclid.cmp Volumes available via Euclid</ref>, an non-profit organization initiated by Cornell University Library that makes a large number of math papers and books available for free in electronic form. This portion of the journal is provided through the publisher's generous support of the EMANI<ref>http://www.emani.org/ EMANI</ref> project, the Electronic Mathematical Archiving Network Initiative to support the long-term electronic preservation of mathematical publications.



Revision as of 08:12, 8 September 2009

Communications in Mathematical Physics
DisciplineMathematical Physics
LanguageEnglish
Edited byM. Aizenman
Publication details
History1965-present
Publisher
Frequency24/year
2.075 (2008)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4CMP
Indexing
ISSN0010-3616 (print)
1432-0916 (web)
Links

Communications in Mathematical Physics is published by Springer. The journal publishes papers in all fields of Mathematical Physics, but its strength lies particularly in Analysis related to Condensed Matter Physics, Statistical Mechanics and Quantum Field Theory, and in Operator algebras, Quantum Information and Relativity. It is considered the leading journal in the field.
Volume 1 (1965) through Volume 183 (1997) are currently available free of charge in electronic form via Project Euclid[1], an non-profit organization initiated by Cornell University Library that makes a large number of math papers and books available for free in electronic form. This portion of the journal is provided through the publisher's generous support of the EMANI[2] project, the Electronic Mathematical Archiving Network Initiative to support the long-term electronic preservation of mathematical publications.

History

Rudolf Haag conceived this project with Res Jost, and Haag became the Founding Chief Editor. The first issue of Communications in Mathematical Physics appeared in 1965. Haag guided the journal for the next 8 years. Then Klaus Hepp succeeded him for 3 years, followed by James Glimm, for another 3 years. Arthur Jaffe began as chief editor in 1979 and served for 21 years. Michael Aizenman became the fifth chief editor in the year 2000. In 1990 an issue of Communications in Mathematical Physics appeared dedicated to Res Jost and Arthur Wightman. Res wrote the dedication to Arthur, signing it on the "Rigi." Res lived to see that issue appear in print, but died only a few days later following his long battle with cancer.

Editorial Board and Topics

Chief Editor
M. Aizenman
Editorial Board
P.T. Chrusciel, General relativity, differential geometry in physics
A. Connes, Quantum physics and differential geometry
P. Constantin, Flow equations, nonlinear PDE of mathematical physics
G. Gallavotti, Field theory, mechanics and condensed matter; nonequilibrium and dynamical systems
A. Kapustin, String theory, nonperturbative field theory and related topics
Y. Kawahigashi, Algebraic quantum field theory and related issues of operator algebras
N.A. Nekrasov, String theory, supersymmetric gauge theories, instantons
M.B. Ruskai, Quantum information theory
M. Salmhofer, Field theory, renormalization, and condensed matter
I.M. Sigal, Quantum mechanics of radiation and matter, PDE of quantum physics
B. Simon, Schrödinger operators and atomic physics
S. Smirnov, Topics in mathematical physics involving complex analysis, probability or one-dimensional dynamics
H. Spohn, Statistical physics
L. Takhtajan, Classical and quantum integrable systems, conformal field theory and related topics
F. Toninelli, Disordered systems
H.-T. Yau, Quantum dynamics and nonequilibrium statistical mechanics
S. Zelditch, Quantum chaos, spectral geometry and random waves

Advisory Board
J. L. Cardy
L. Faddeev
M. E. Fisher
A. Jaffe
J. L. Lebowitz
N. Seiberg
I. Singer

Mission

The mission of Communications in Mathematical Physics is to offer a high forum for works which are motivated by the vision and the challenges of modern physics and which at the same time meet the highest mathematical standards.
Further information about the journal’s mission and standards of presentation can be found in the Editorial from 2003[1].

References