Physical Review erratum

Information for Authors

  • Manuscript Preparation
    • Content Guidelines
    • Technical Format and Style Guidelines
  • Manuscript Submission and Resubmission
    • Submission
    • Resubmission
  • Review Process
  • Post Acceptance
    • Publicity
    • Open Access Article-Processing Charges [APCs]

Manuscript Preparation

To find information regarding our standard peer-review practices, please consult the Editorial Policies and Practices; otherwise, the following guidelines provide an overview of content, technical, and style requirements for preparing manuscripts for submission to the Physical Review journals. For comprehensive guidelines, please consult the Physical Review Style and Notation Guide, Frequently used Memos, and other indicated guidelines, as well as recent issues of the specific journals.

Content Guidelines

Readability and Accessibility: Take special care to ensure that manuscripts are well organized, clearly written in scientific English, and written in a style consistent with that of the Physical Review journals. It is not possible for editors to undertake extensive corrections of manuscripts, due to time constraints and the risk that the authors meaning might be distorted. If your first language is not English, consider seeking help from a native English speaker when writing your manuscript.

Direct the manuscript text at a general readership, so as to make it understandable to a broad spectrum of researchers. Physical Review editors recommend avoiding jargon and the excessive use of acronyms, even for commonly used terms. If jargon and acronyms are necessary, please define them in the text. Also, avoid the introduction of new terminology except when needed to convey a unique or nuanced meaning.

To enhance readability, display all but the simplest equations, rather than including them as inline text. Format figures and tables such that their content and details are readable when they are sized for the journal page. The size of the smallest capital letters and numerals should be at least 2 mm.

Physical Review editors ask authors to proofread papers prior to submission, to eliminate grammatical errors, misspellings, and omission of symbols.

General Content: Clearly state the relation of the submitted manuscript to previously published work, including papers, meeting abstracts, and conference proceedings. [Preprints and internal laboratory reports are not considered publications.] If the results reported in the manuscript correct, supplement, or supersede previous results, state this advance. Distinguish your results from those previously obtained.

Length

Length limits vary among the Physical Review journals. Each journals length limits are indicated in the following table.

Article Length Limits
PRLLetter
Comment/Reply
3,750 words
750 words
PRXComment/Reply3,500 words
PRX EnergyComment/Reply3,500 words
Perspective
Tutorial
3,000 words
37,500 words
PRX QuantumComment/Reply3,500 words
Perspective
Tutorial
7,500 words
37,500 words
RMPArticle
Colloquium
50,000 words
20,000 words
PRALetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRBLetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRCLetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
1,500 words
PRDLetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRELetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRResearchReview Article
Letter
Comment/Reply
30,000 words
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRABNo limit
PRAppliedReview Article
Comment/Reply
Letter
30,000 words
3,500 words
3,500 words
PRFluidsLetter
Comment/Reply
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRMaterialsReview Article
Research Update
Letter
Comment/Reply
30,000 words
10,000 words
4,500 words
3,500 words
PRPERReview Article
Short Paper
Comment/Reply
No limit
3,500 words
3,500 words

The Physical Review journals require authors to abide by the length guidelines. An automatic count of the length of each manuscript is made upon submission. If this count indicates that the manuscripts length exceeds the journals limit, staff will more carefully calculate the length. Authors will be asked to shorten overlength manuscripts prior to review. The length restriction applies to all versions of a manuscript. Upon acceptance for publication, the length of a manuscript may be re-evaluated and cuts may be requested prior to production. More edits may be necessary when the article is composed into journal pages; this process may cause a delay in publication of the article.

For a more detailed explanation of length limits, please consult the journals Length Limit Guide.

Titles

Titles should be concise and informative, clearly stating the main findings of the manuscript. Avoid using new terminology, hyperboles assessing the quality of the work [precise, important, or accurate], proper nouns and brand names [name of equipment, people, or places], and coined words. Titles of manuscripts submitted to the Comments section have the format Comment on Title of the original paper. Please consult the Physical Review Style and Notation Guide for a comprehensive reference to style and format requirements for titles.

Abstracts

Abstracts should concisely summarize the subjects, conclusions, and results of the manuscript. In the abstracts of experimental papers, specify the quantities measured and objects studied and clearly describe the experimental conditions. Avoid coined words and unexplained acronyms. Abstracts should be self-contained and should not include footnotes or citations to references, as abstracts are reprinted in abstracting journals and databases where such information is not useful. Note that Comments and Replies submitted to PRL do not require abstracts.

Abstract Length Limits
PRL 600 characters
PRXAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRX EnergyAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRX QuantumAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
RMP< one paragraph
PRAAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRBAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRCAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRDAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PREAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRResearchAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRABAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRAppliedAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRFluidsAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRMaterialsAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words
PRPERAbout 5% of article length & < 500 words

Supplemental Material

Supplemental Material is information that is useful to a subset of readers but is not essential to comprehend the articles main results. The Physical Review journals archive Supplemental Material, providing permanent access to the information. Supplemental Material includes, but is not limited to, multimedia files, tables of raw or analyzed data, parameters used in or produced by calculations, and computer codes. Information regarding how the research was conducted, such as details of sample preparation, and derivations of equations, can also be included in the Supplemental Material if this information is not crucial to a readers understanding of the associated paper. The paper must stand on its own; it must be understandable and convincing without the Supplemental Material. These file formats are acceptable for Supplemental Material.

Supplemental Material is subject to the same copyright agreement as the associated paper. Follow the guidelines in the copyright agreement for the published manuscript when replicating information included in the Supplemental Material.

Do not use Supplemental Material to avoid a length limit; often, a short paper accompanied by a lengthy supplement is not appropriate. Editors use their judgment to decide if a longer manuscript with all material integrated into the main text is required. The editors may seek guidance in this decision from the referees who review the manuscript and Supplemental Material. In a longer format manuscript, it may be best to present additional material as an appendix to the main article, rather than as Supplemental Material. In general, Supplemental Material should not accompany Comments, Replies, or Errata. List all references cited in the Supplemental Material in the main text.

Cite the manuscripts Supplemental Material in the reference list as follows:

See Supplemental Material at [URL will be inserted by publisher] for [give brief description of material]. All files related to a published paper are stored as a single deposit and assigned a Supplemental Material URL. This URL appears in the articles reference list.

Joint Submissions: As an alternative to Supplemental Material, authors submitting to Physical Review Letters may simultaneously submit a longer accompanying manuscript to one of the topical Physical Review journals. The longer manuscript should provide a substantially increased understanding of the subject while keeping the overlap of figures, tables, and text material to a minimum. Joint papers provide readers with easier access to the complete account of the work. When authors submit simultaneously to Physical Review Letters and to Physical Review, the two manuscripts are reviewed coherently, typically by the same reviewers. If both papers receive favorable reviews, they are published together, unless simultaneous publication leads to undue delay for one of the papers. In Joint Submissions, the paper and the Letter cite each other.

Technical Format and Style Guidelines

References and footnotes

Combine references and footnotes to text material in a single list, and number the items consecutively in the order in which they are cited. Designate references and footnotes in the text with inline numerals in square brackets.

The full author list of cited papers should be given in the references, except when the number exceeds 10 [for Physical Review Physics Education Research the limit is 3]. When citations are made to internal reports, other items not available in the published literature, or unpublished work, it is the responsibility of the author to provide sufficient information to enable the reader to obtain a copy of the cited material. Citations to papers published in peer-reviewed journals are considered primary references. Citations to e-print archives should not be used in place of primary references. Citations to classified reports or other documents with restricted circulation should be avoided. All citations, including those cited in figure and table captions, should be listed in the reference section.

It is important to confirm the accuracy of the bibliographic information in the references. Links will be added to the cited document. If reference citations are incorrect or incomplete [e.g., missing author name, or an incorrect volume number or page], the associated links may fail.

Physical Review encourages authors to include titles for all references as an aid to the reader. If this format is used, it must be applied to all references. Please note that Physical Review X, PRX Energy, PRX Quantum, Physical Review Research, Physical Review Applied, and Physical Review Fluids require all references to include titles.

Byline and Affiliations

Bylines: The names of authors and their professional affiliations must be given in the byline at the beginning of a manuscript. If the number of authors exceeds 40, the authors will be listed in the Table of Contents as, e.g., A. Jones et al. The author who submits the manuscript is responsible for ensuring that all listed authors approve the inclusion of their names, and for checking that each name is written in the format normally used by that author.

Formatting Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Author Names: Authors with Chinese, Japanese, or Korean names can display their names in their own language alongside the English versions of their names [see Editorial: Which Wei Wang?]. If this option is chosen, please include a note in the cover letter and check the appropriate box on the Submissions server when submitting or resubmitting the manuscript. Please check the PDF produced by the Submissions server to ensure the names appear correctly. Also, carefully check any production proofs you receive prior to the publication of your paper.

The following font styles are used by the Physical Review journals to typeset Chinese, Japanese, or Korean characters: SongMT [Simplified Chinese]; SungMT [Traditional Chinese]; MS Mincho [Japanese]; Batang [Korean]. To add Chinese, Japanese, and Korean author names to Microsoft Word files, add the characters in parentheses after each authors name. Please use standard Microsoft fonts for the characters. For manuscripts prepared using TeX, use REVTeX 4 and the CJK language package for LaTeX. The Physical Review journals support the following CJK package encodings: GB, Big5, GBK, and UTF 8 [Chinese]; JIS, SJIS [Shift-JIS], and UTF8 [Japanese]; KS and UTF8 [Korean]. Note, if using UTF-8, the \CJKfamily macro may be needed when processing the file on a local machine. The macros are: \CJKfamily{gbsn} [Simplified Chinese]; \CJKfamily{bsmi} [Traditional Chinese]; \CJKfamily{min} [Japanese]; \CJKfamily{mj} [Korean]. If needed, it is possible to call \CJKfamily more than once, for example, to properly typeset both a Japanese and a Korean name. Before submitting the manuscript, comment out all \CJKfamily macro calls. The CJK markup is as follows:

Put \usepackage{CJK} after the \documentclass line \begin{CJK*}{}{} after the \begin{document} line \end{CJK*} after the \maketitle line.

For example:

\documentclass[aps,prl,preprint]{revtex4} \usepackage{CJK} .... \begin{document} \begin{CJK*}{GB}{} % Use default fonts from CJK [see below] \title{Title of Paper} \author{Your Name [characters]} \affiliation{Your affiliation} ... \maketitle \end{CJK*}

Formatting A Collaboration Author List: Collaborations of 50 or more authors are encouraged to use the SPIRES Collaboration Author Lists XML Format to submit author names. Please provide the authors.xml file when submitting the manuscript.

Collaborations may also use a TeX format for author names. In that case, use REVTeX 4 [or 4.2] for the text file, not Word or plain LaTeX, and name the files with a .tex extension. To automatically link author names with affiliations, use the REVTeX 4 superscriptaddress document style as described in the REVTeX 4 sample template file. Please include the author list in the main text file of the submission [the one with the \begin{document} command]. List each author on a different line and use the \author command. Only use standard LaTeX and REVTeX 4 commands in the author list. Completely remove collaboration members from the author list that are not to be listed as authors on the manuscript. The following example gives a portion of an acceptably coded TeX-format author list for a collaboration:

\author{N.~Arnaud}
\author{J.~B'equilleux}
\author{A.~DOrazio}
\affiliation{University of California at Irvine, Irvine, California 92697, USA}
\author{M.~Davier}
\author{J.~Firmino da Costa}
\author{G.~Grosdidier}
\author{A.~H"ocker}
\affiliation{Brunel University, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, United Kingdom}
\collaboration{The Sample Collaboration}
\noaffiliation

Affiliations of authors should be given without abbreviation. [Use Massachusetts Institute of Technology, not MIT.] Give the city, state, and zip code for U.S. addresses; add the country for other addresses. Affiliations must be institutions, not conferences, collaborations, or temporary meeting places.

If the authors are at different institutions, author names may be grouped by institution with the name of the institution following each group. If the authors are not grouped by institution, the names of institutions may be presented in a single list following the list of authors. A variant form for listing institutions links each author to their institution[s] unambiguously via a superscript numeral: Each institution is given a number, and the relevant number is then placed after each authors name. Group [collaboration] names can be listed in addition to author names. The group name goes in parentheses after the list of authors and before the list of institutions. Please choose the most concise presentation.

Footnotes to an authors name or address facilitate locating or communicating with an author. In many cases, it is helpful to identify an author as spokesperson or author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Footnotes giving email addresses of one or more corresponding authors are encouraged. Include information concerning research support in the acknowledgments. Footnotes describing an authors position or title are not acceptable.

Place information concerning author contributions, such as statements of equal contributions, in a paragraph after the Acknowledgment section. For example, A.B. and C.D. contributed equally to this work. or A.Z. and B.Y. conceptualized the work; C.X. conducted the experiments.

Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments are a simple statement of thanks that appears at the end of a manuscript. They can recognize named individuals who contributed scientifically to the research of the paper; cite the funding agencies that provided financial support for the work; and note the affiliation of institutions in the byline. Acknowledgments to people precede those of financial support.

Acknowledgments may not recognize those who helped in preparing the paper; editors who handled the peer review of the paper; those who contributed general encouragement [family, friends]; or those who provided services that were not directly part of the research. Acknowledgements may not include a dedication or a memorial.

Acknowledge positions, titles, and awards only if they provided funding for the research and state the source of financial funding in such cases. Noting the date associated with an award is not appropriate.

Notations and Mathematical Material

Keep notation clear, compact, and consistent with standard usage.

Neatly format, punctuate, and align equations to bring out their structure. Number equations on the right. Punctuate mathematical expressions and displayed equations as part of the sentence. Use single-letter symbols for mathematical quantities in equations and expressions, with subscript or superscript indices or labels, if necessary. Replace a frequently repeated mathematical equation with a symbol. Use bracketing as necessary to ensure clarity. Note that the solidus [/] in fractions, for example 1/2a, means 1/[2a] and not [1/2]a. Do not use a center dot to indicate multiplication except for products of vectors, dyadics, and the like.

In general, three-vectors are set in roman boldface. Four or more vectors are usually set in lightface italic, but boldface is acceptable. Ordinary type is preferable when using Greek letters. Typographically distinguish matrices, operators, and other general quantities only to avoid confusion; in such cases use boldface or a caret.

The Physical Review Style and Notation Guide includes further details on notations and mathematical expressions, along with exceptions to these conventions.

Symbols and Units

Physical Review style favors the use of metric SI units, as recommended by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics [IUPAP] and the National Institute of Standards and Technology [NIST]. Some include:

Common Abbreviations and Misuses
UseDo Not Use
µmµ
nm
fmF [F is for farad]
ggm
Aamp
K°K
srSr, ster, str
uamu
cm3cc
degDEG, DEG., deg.
keVKEV, KeV
MeVMev, MEV
MeV/nucleonMeV/u, MeV/amu, MeV/A
µNn.m.
c.m. [=center of mass]CM
arb. unitsa.u. [for atomic units]

Physical Review follows the recommendations of the S.U.N. Commission of IUPAP on the symbols to be used for nuclides and their states.

Preferred NotationsNotation ExampleStyle Notes
nucleon number [mass number]14Nleft superscript
state of ionizationCa2+right superscript
excited state110Agm, 14N*right superscript
number of atoms in a molecule14N2right subscript
bombarding particlesn, p, d, t, h, and 𝛼𝜏 not acceptable
other beam particles6Li, 12C, ...only the usual symbols
target nuclides1H, 2H, 3H, 3He, 4He ...not D, T,
differential cross sectionσ[ϑ], σ[E,ϑ]i.e., angle or energy shown as argument
derivatived2σ/dΩ dEd2σ by itself or dσ/dΩdE not acceptable
mathematical relationshipdM/dA, ds/dZe.g., semiempirical mass formula; not acceptable for data characterization since A and Z are not continuous

Exceptions to these conventions and further details on Notations and Mathematical Equations are found in the Physical Review Style and Notation Guide.

Tables and Figures

Tables are numbered [with roman numerals] in the order in which they appear in text. Give each table a caption that explains the contents of the table and that includes definition of symbols. Keep column headings simple and include units in these headings. Very simple and brief tabular material may appear in the text without a number or caption.

Use a single horizontal rule to separate the column headings from the entries in the table. Use horizontal space within the body of the table to separate broad groups of entries. Extra vertical space may be used between columns. Avoid vertical rules in tables. Use lower-case roman letters for footnotes placed at the bottom of a table.

If space allows, long data tables can be included directly in the manuscript, rather than in the Supplemental Material. This decision is influenced by whether readers can accurately obtain the data from a figure and by how many readers are likely to use the numbers. If experimental results are likely to be used as reference values by other authors, publication of the numbers is desirable. Extensive datasets may be deposited as Supplemental Material. If additional numerical data are available, include a statement regarding the availability of the data at the end of the manuscript, before the Acknowledgments. The statement should cite a reference that provides the information needed to access the data [e.g., name of repository, doi, etc.]. See the Physical Review Style and Notation Guide for complete information regarding the proper form for data citations.

Figures should have a width of a 8.6 cm or 3 3/8 in, the width of a single manuscript column. Use a width of 1.5 or 2 columns for more detailed figures. Authors are required to submit all figures electronically for production. Preferred formats are .ps, .eps, .pdf, .jpg, and .png; refer to the manuscript Submission Guidelines below for more details. Number figures in the order in which they are referred to in the text.

Give each figure a caption that clearly summarizes the contents of the figure. Define figure symbols and curves either in a legend in the figure itself or in the caption. Label subfigures [a], [b], etc., and include a description of each panel given in the caption. If possible, submit figures with multiple panels as one file.

Format figures such that their content and details are readable when they are sized for the journal page. Make the height of the smallest capital letters and numerals at least 2 mm and make the diameter of each data point at least 1 mm. Make a curves linewidth at least 0.18 mm [0.5 point]. Avoid small open symbols, shading, and cross-hatching in figures.

Label figure axes with the quantities plotted and place units in parentheses after the quantity. Keep the style of figures and text consistent. See the Physical Review Style and Notation Guide and Axis Labels and Scales on Graphs for more information on how to style figure axes.

Submit photographic images [either grayscale or color] as high-resolution .jpg or .png files. Avoid submitting prescreened [scanned] images of photographic material as they may not have sufficient resolution. If scanned images have to be used, make scans with as high a resolution as possible [preferably 600 dpi or higher] and then scale the figure to its final size.

Figures should accurately present the scientific results. If adjustments to images, such as changing its brightness, are made, state the adjustment in the figure caption.

For color-online-only figures, a .ps or .eps file is required for production. Ensure color online figures are intelligible in grey scale. To achieve this goal, use colors that have clearly distinguished grey-scale values. To assist in differentiating colored curves, use different line styles [dashed, solid, etc.] and give a description of the lines in the caption. See Guide to Acceptable use of Color in Color Online Figures for more information.

In order to reproduce previously published figures, tables, etc., authors must show that they have complied with the requirements of the publisher of that material. Authors can demonstrate they have permission to reproduce the material by sending a written agreement from the publisher and author of the originally published work. If the original journal is published by APS, only a written agreement from the original author is required.

The Physical Review Style and Notation Guide includes further details on formatting figures and tables.

Manuscript Submission and Resubmission

Submission

Submit manuscripts via our Submissions server. The Submissions server is designed to enable fast and easy uploading of the manuscript and to enable entering of information required for the peer-review process. Receipt of a submission during business hours is acknowledged by email within one business day.

Specify the author to whom correspondence should be addressed, and give all available contact information for this individual [postal and email addresses, phone number]. Specify the journal and section to which the paper is submitted, and select 3-8 PhySH [Physics Subject Headings] concepts if possible; Physical Review Applied, Physical Review X, PRX Energy, PRX Quantum, and Physical Review Research ask authors to choose three or fewer subject areas. More information about the PhySH physics classification scheme is available in PhySH Guidelines for Authors, and the full scheme is available at PhySH-Physics Subject Headings.

If an important subject of the manuscript is not classifiable by a PhySH concept, please give an appropriate keyword or phrase, and indicate approximately where in the scheme this topic would be best placed. Feedback on the PhySH scheme is welcomed.

Submissions formatted in REVTeX or MS WORD are preferred. Upload the main body of the manuscript [including figures, tables, captions, etc.] to the Submissions server as a single file. Also send a cover letter, auxiliary files and figures, and Supplemental Material via the Submissions server. Copies of the manuscript sent by regular mail are not processed.

Authors of manuscripts that are sent for external review are directed, via email, to an online, interactive service to complete the needed publication rights agreement, such as the APS Transfer of Copyright agreement. While the agreement takes effect only when the manuscript is accepted for publication in a Physical Review journal, the prompt completion of this process prevents unnecessary processing delays. Accepted manuscripts are not forwarded to production until the journal is in receipt of the agreement.

The Editorial Policies and Practices include further details on submission policies.

Resubmission

When resubmitting a manuscript, please include a summary of changes made and a concise, point-by-point response to all recommendations and criticisms. The modified manuscript and figures can be uploaded using the interactive resubmission forms available on our Submissions server. These forms should also be used when a manuscript previously submitted to one Physical Review journal is transferred to another. Send the complete text file if there have been any changes.

For any resubmission, please state whether or not the figures have been modified, and supply new electronic figures if there have been changes. It is only necessary to resend figure files when the previous versions are no longer valid. Please update any other information [e.g., address and contact information] that has changed since the initial submission.

The Editorial Policies and Practices include further details on resubmission policies.

Author Inquiries

Information regarding the status of a manuscript under consideration by the Physical Review journals is available on the following webpage. If clarification is needed, send an email message to the journal with the following subject line: Status, Manuscript ID, Corresponding Author Name.

For accepted papers, information about the production status is available via a similar service maintained by the production vendor. A link to this service is provided on the manuscript status page.

Review Process

The following information provides details regarding the review process for manuscripts submitted to the Physical Review journals. For more information on our standard peer-review practices, please consult the Editorial Policies and Practices.

Peer Review: Peer review by independent, anonymous referees is one of the most important reasons for the existence of a scientific journal. Journal readers benefit since at least one independent expert has judged that the manuscript is new and interesting, that it contributes to the advancement of the field, and that it is without apparent flaws. Of course, it is impossible for either the journal or the referees to guarantee the correctness or the originality of the research. Authors benefit from peer review via feedback on the research and the style of presentation. Note that the review policies and procedures vary by journal.

Review Timeline: The time from receipt to publication of a manuscript depends on many factors, including the article type [Letter or Regular Article, for example], the availability of referees, and the editors workload. The time authors take to respond to referee comments and revise the manuscript also plays a role in the review timeline.

Referee Selection: Editors choose one or more referees from a common database of thousands of potential referees. The editors base their referee choices on factors including the referees area of expertise and their availability [we try to avoid overburdening referees], the quality of the referees reports, and the referees typical response time.

Suggesting Referees: Authors are encouraged to suggest the names of potential referees. Referee suggestions can be added during the manuscript submission process on the Editorial Info page. Click on the Add button and enter the name, email, and affiliation for each suggested referee. The editors consider the suggestions, but the suggested referees are not necessarily chosen. Authors should avoid listing previous coauthors and collaborators.

Excluding Referees: Authors can request that certain referees are not contacted. The names of these referees can be added during the manuscript submission process on the Editorial Info page. In the text box, provide the names of a few specific people [not names of research groups, collaborations, or institutions] and include a brief explanation of why you are making the request. Although such requests are usually honored it is customary to give authors whose work is criticized in a manuscript an opportunity to respond to the criticism.

Number of Referees: The number of referees contacted to review a manuscript varies by journal. Typically, editors choose one or two referees to initially review a manuscript. In some cases, the editors may contact more than two referees, for example to gain input from referees with differing expertise or if there is uncertainty about the availability of a particular expert. If a referee is tardy, the editors may contact an additional referee, and if the tardy referee then responds, we may receive more anonymous reports than usual. If an impasse is reached between the authors and referees, the editors may consult another referee in an effort to close the review process.

Rejection without Review: Not all manuscripts are sent for review. Editors often reject manuscripts that they judge to be clearly unsuitable for the journal. However, no manuscript is accepted for publication without review by external referees.

Rounds of Review: Editors typically reach a final decision on whether to publish a manuscript after one or two rounds of review.

Responding to Referee Reports: Authors should read referee reports carefully and dispassionately and approach the reports with an open mind. What may at first seem like a devastating blow is perhaps a request for more information or for a more detailed explanation. At other times the referee may indeed have found a fatal flaw in the research or logic. Put yourself in the position of a reader, which is exactly the position of the referee. Is the manuscript well written? Is the presentation clear, unambiguous, and logical? Respond to all referee comments, suggestions, and criticisms. When writing your response, please formulate it in gender-neutral terms. If unavoidable, please use the singular they/them/theirs in place of gender-specific pronouns. Explain which changes have been made and state your position on points of disagreement..

Post Acceptance

Publicity

If your paper is accepted for publication in a Physical Review journal, please consider submitting a summary of the paper. The summary should include a newspaper-style headline and one paragraph explaining the main result of the paper and why its important. Write the summary so that its understandable by non-scientists. Send the plain text summary [no LaTeX or Word documents] to with the subject line summary [accession code]. When emailing the summary, consider sending one or a few low-resolution image files that illustrate the results. Preferred formats are jpeg/jpg, gif, and png. After a summary is submitted, an automatic email acknowledgment will be sent from author-summaries+.

The summaries are used by the following venues to inform decisions on what papers to cover:

  • Physics: Daily news stories and commentary about a selection of papers from the Physical Review journals.
  • Media Tip Sheet: Weekly email message distributed to journalists to promote press-worthy papers from the Physical Review journals. The tip sheet has led to news articles in publications including Science, Nature, and the New York Times.
  • Physics Buzz Blog: Blog covering a wide range of physics topics of interest to the general public.

In addition, the Physical Review editors occasionally consider summaries when making decisions on what papers to highlight as Editors Suggestions. These papers are judged to be particularly important, interesting, or well written, and are prominently displayed on the journal web pages.

Hints for Writing a Good Summary: Be brief. 200 words is usually enough. Shorter summaries are often better as they include fewer details that tend to distract from the main points. Try to get to the bottom line in the first sentence or two before stepping back to go over background information. Think of the way a newspaper article is written, with the most important points at the top. Aim the summary at non-scientists and not physicists. Using this style helps those reading the summary to visualize how the topic could be presented to a non-scientific audience. Avoid or define any jargon. State why the result is important in direct terms, even if it seems obvious. Clearly distinguish between what is new in the paper and what is merely background information.

Other Publicity: The journal editors encourage authors to notify their institutions public information or press office if the paper is accepted. The press office may want to mention the paper in their own publications or may want to inform local media. The email addresses of institutional press offices are searchable at Newswise.

Open Access Publishing Options

The Physical Review family offers some of the most-trusted, most-read, most-cited, and fastest-growing fully open access and hybrid journals in physics and related areas of research. Both fully open access journals and hybrid journals allow authors to publish their research immediately open access, usually upon payment of an article publication charge [APC].

In the fully gold open access journals including Physical Review X, PRX Energy, PRX Quantum, PRResearch, and PRPER all accepted articles are published open access under a CC-BY 4.0 International license, upon the payment of an APC.

The hybrid journals including PRL, PRA, PRB, PRC, PRD, PRE, PRApplied, PRFluids, and PRMaterials allow authors to publish at no cost under the traditional subscription model, and also provide authors the option to publish an accepted article open access under a CC-BY 4.0 International license, upon the payment of an APC.

CC-BY 4.0 International is one of the most permissive Creative Commons Attribution licenses available and permits anyone to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt work with proper attribution. Authors retain copyright to their articles under this license. Authors seeking to publish articles under the Creative Commons Attribution license should select this option when they are asked to complete the appropriate Publication Rights documentation. Accepted licensed articles will not be published until any applicable APC is paid in full.

APC pricing information for the year 2021, including current promotional discounts, is listed here.

APCs are waived for authors from developing countries that APS offers free online access to under the SRKS Program. This waiver may be requested by emailing .

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