If supplementary material is included with the manuscript, please note it in the cover letter, clearly name the supplementary file, and include a Word file labeled “Multimedia ReadMe” containing the following information:
If your paper is published, the supplementary material would be linked to the printed Magazine via QR code for ease of reader access. There is no page limit for the supplementary material part. These sections could contain mathematical developments, extra experiments, multimedia, and more specialized content addressing those interested in going deeper in the topic of the paper. We encourage supplementary material (published only online on IEEE Xplore) to be included, which contain extra sections that could be, when needed, more technical in nature. Long technical developments and equations should be kept to a minimal amount and a preference should be instead given to qualitative descriptions, figures, diagrams, and graphs for delineating concepts and relationships.
PDF format is preferred, though Microsoft Word documents (.doc.
Papers must use the one-column IEEE AP Magazine template, which can be found using the IEEE Template Selector (). Papers that are over 14 pages in length may result in automatic rejection. It should have a preferred length of 10 one-column pages or less and it must not exceed 14 one-column pages. The main body of the paper (published both in paper and online) should have a writing style understandable to the average reader in the Antennas and Propagation Society including those doing research outside the field of expertise of the manuscript. Paper Writing Style and GuidelinesĬontributions to the IEEE Antennas and Propagation magazine are only accepted through the ScholarOne Manuscripts web-based system at. If you are interested in guest editing a special issue for possible publication in the AP Magazine, please contact the Editor-in-Chief, for more information on special issue guidelines. The Editor-in-Chief reserves the right to accept, reject, and/or edit any and all material submitted. All column contributions to departments are reviewed by the Associate Editor for that department, with additional peer review as deemed necessary by the Associate Editor.
For specific questions regarding columns, please contact the Associate Editor for that particular column.Īll feature articles are subject to full peer review per IEEE policy. If that manuscript type is not available for selection in ScholarOne, then that column is not accepting outside submissions for now. Please select the appropriate manuscript type when submitting. Some columns are open for outside submissions. Feature articles may be solicited by guest editors for special issues of the magazine. All review and tutorial papers must have a pre-approved proposal by the Editor-in-Chief prior to submission: link to proposal form.
The Editor-in-Chief may also give the authors suggestions on how a paper could better fit into APM's scope and have a higher rate of success in proceeding into the review process. It is highly encouraged to contact the Editor-in-Chief or column editor prior to submission to discuss the potential paper and whether it fits within APM's scope. We especially encourage articles written specifically for the Magazine and are accessible and understandable to readers who may be working in many different fields. If a paper could be equally submitted to the Transactions on Antennas and Propagation (TAP), the Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters (AWPL), or the Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation (OJAP), the paper may not work for the Antennas and Propagation Magazine, as it has a high likelihood of being out of scope. A detailed statement of the scope and field of interest of the Magazine is available in the society bylaws at. Review, tutorial, and historical articles are welcome, as are articles describing examples of good engineering. Emphasis is placed on providing the reader with a general understanding of either a particular subject or of the technical challenges being addressed by various organizations, as well as their capabilities to cope with these challenges. The IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine publishes feature articles and columns that describe engineering activities within its scope, taking place in industry, government, and universities.