- 1. Scientific scope
- 2. Categories of contributions
- 3. Submission and handling of manuscripts
- 4. Layout and typography
- 5. Abstract, synopsis and keywords
- 6. Diagrams and photographs (`figures')
- 7. Tables
- 8. Nomenclature
- 9. References
- 10. Supplementary publication procedure (deposition)
- 11. File transfer
- 12. Electronic status information
- 13. Reprints
- References
- 1. Scientific scope
- 2. Categories of contributions
- 3. Submission and handling of manuscripts
- 4. Layout and typography
- 5. Abstract, synopsis and keywords
- 6. Diagrams and photographs (`figures')
- 7. Tables
- 8. Nomenclature
- 9. References
- 10. Supplementary publication procedure (deposition)
- 11. File transfer
- 12. Electronic status information
- 13. Reprints
- References
1. Scientific scope
The Journal of Synchrotron Radiation seeks to cover all aspects of synchrotron radiation thus bringing together the full range of interests and skills of the synchrotron radiation community. Contributions are invited within the general areas of instrumentation, methods and applications. Instrumentation papers covering synchrotron radiation sources and beamlines, optics, detectors, electronics and data acquisition, and sample chambers and environment are welcomed. Methods and applications papers are invited within the categories of diffraction, spectroscopy and imaging.
2. Categories of contributions
2.1. Full Articles
Full Articles should not normally exceed the equivalent of about 10000 words (1000 words are equivalent to about four pages of double-spaced manuscript). All papers are sent to referees (ordinarily two) before they are accepted for publication.
2.2. Short Communications
These are intended for the presentation of topics of limited scope or for preliminary announcements of novel research findings. They are not intended for interim reports of work in progress, and must report results that are of scientific value in their own right.
Short Communications differ from ordinary articles not only in being shorter (they should not normally exceed 1000 words), but also in being printed in smaller type. They are sent to referees in the normal way.
2.3. Fast Communications
Fast Communications should not normally exceed the equivalent of about 2000 words (or eight pages of double-spaced typescript). In the letter accompanying the submission, authors should state why rapid publication is essential. Papers submitted for the Fast Communications section but judged by the editor not to merit rapid publication will be considered for inclusion with regular papers.
2.4. Reviews
The Main Editors occasionally invite leaders in selected areas to write Lead Articles, which are forward-looking reviews of specific topics. In addition, unsolicited review articles may be submitted. A brief outline of the proposed article should first be sent to one of the Main Editors. All selected Lead Articles and review articles will be refereed in the usual manner. These articles should not normally exceed 15000 words.
2.5. Computer Programs
A brief description of the purpose, strategy, computer language, machine requirements, input requirements and the type of results obtained should be included. It is also ordinarily required that the adequacy of the documentation shall have been proven by the successful use of the program by someone outside the author's institution. Computer Programs should not normally exceed 5000 words. They are sent to referees in the normal way.
2.6. Laboratory Notes
These are very brief descriptions of special devices, equipment modifications, techniques for accomplishing certain tasks etc. A simple schematic drawing may often be preferable to an actual photograph of the apparatus. These articles should not normally exceed 500 words and will not be refereed.
2.7. Computer Program Abstracts
This section provides a rapid means of communicating up-to-date information concerning both new programs or systems and significant updates to existing ones. Either the names and addresses of those people outside the author's laboratory who have used and tested the program(s) or a source-code listing and test execution should be provided. These will be sent to the referees as supporting material but will not be published or deposited in any form. A Computer Program Abstract should not exceed 500 words in length and should use the standard format given in J. Appl. Cryst. (1985), 18, 189–190. Reprints of this paper may be obtained from the Managing Editor.
2.8. Letters to the Editor
These may deal with non-technical aspects of synchrotron radiation, its role, its propagation, the proper functions of its Societies etc. or may make a technical observation that would usefully be brought to wider attention.
2.9. New Commercial Products
Announcements of new commercial products are published free of charge. The descriptions, up to 300 words or the equivalent if a figure is included, should give the manufacturer's full address.
The International Union of Crystallography can assume no responsibility for the accuracy of the claims made.
3. Submission and handling of manuscripts
3.1. Address for submissions
All papers should be sent to:
The Managing Editor
International Union of Crystallography
5 Abbey Square
Chester CH1 2HU
England
Telephone: 44 1244 342878
Fax: 44 1244 314888
E-mail: med@iucr.org
Ftp: ftp.iucr.org (192.70.242.1)
3.2. Submission
Manuscripts should be prepared on one side of the paper in double-spaced format. All contributions should be submitted in triplicate and authors are reminded to keep an exact copy of the original and revised manuscript for later editorial adjustments and for checking proofs. A machine-readable version of the final accepted manuscript will be requested by the Editorial Office, provided it can be prepared using one of the word-processing formats listed in §3.5. This request is designed to reduce publication times.
Every issue of the journal contains the names and addresses of the Main Editors and the Co-editors. The information is also available at http://www.iucr.org/jsr. Editors are assigned to a paper according to their current workload and expertise. However, authors should indicate, in their covering letter, the name of their preferred editor.
3.3. Languages of publication
The languages of publication are English, French, German or Russian. All contributions must be accompanied by an English language Abstract.
3.4. Handling of manuscripts
The Co-editor to whom the manuscript is assigned is responsible for choosing referees and for accepting or rejecting the paper. This responsibility includes decisions on the final form of the paper and interpretation of these Notes when necessary.
If changes to a manuscript requested by the editorial staff or the Co-editor are not received within three months of transmittal to the author, the submission will automatically be withdrawn. Any subsequent communication of the material will be treated as a new submission in the editorial process.
For accepted papers, it is the responsibility of the Managing Editor to prepare the paper for printing. This may involve correspondence with the authors and/or the responsible editor in order to resolve ambiguities or to obtain satisfactory figures or tables. The date of acceptance that will appear on the published paper is the date on which the Managing Editor receives the last item required. Proofs will be sent to the author who signed the letter of submission unless the Managing Editor is informed of some other suitable arrangement.
On rare occasions, an editor may consider that a paper is better suited to another IUCr journal. Alterations to the journal of publication will only be made after full discussion with the communicating author.
3.5. File formats
A machine-readable version of the paper should be prepared in TEX, LATEX or Word. Authors are encouraged to use the template available from the Editorial Office by e-mail (med@iucr.ac.uk) or by ftp (from the `templates' directory). It would be appreciated if all Word submissions were accompanied by an RTF (rich text format) file. After acceptance of the paper for publication, authors should send the version of the paper accepted by the Co-editor to the Editorial Office by e-mail or ftp (see §11) or on diskette.
3.6. Author's warranty
The submission of a paper is taken as an implicit guarantee that the work is original, that it is the author(s) own work, that all authors concur with and are aware of the submission, that all workers involved in the study are listed as authors or given proper credit in the acknowledgments, that the manuscript has not already been published (in any language or medium), and that it is not being considered and will not be offered elsewhere while under consideration for an IUCr journal. For these reasons, the submission must be made over the signature of at least one author.
3.7. Copyright
Except as required otherwise by national laws, an author must sign and submit a copy of the Transfer of Copyright Agreement form (given in at the end of these Notes) for each manuscript before it can be accepted.
4. Layout and typography
Contributions should be prepared on one side of the paper in double-spaced format with wide margins, and should conform to the general editorial style of IUCr journals.
4.1. Type style
The editorial staff in Chester will indicate to the printer the style of type to be used. However, it is helpful if authors indicate vectors and tensors by a wavy underline.
4.2. Mathematics and letter symbols
The use of the stop (period) to denote multiplication should be avoided except in scalar products. Generally no sign is required but, when one is, a multiplication sign (×) should be used.
Greek letters should not be spelled out except in marginal notes of clarification.
Care should be taken not to cause confusion by using the same letter symbol in two different meanings.
Gothic, script, or other unusual lettering should be identified in marginal notes. The printer may be instructed by the Managing Editor to use another type face if that indicated by the author is not readily available.
Equations, including those in published Appendices, should be numbered in a single series.
5. Abstract, synopsis and keywords
All scientific contributions must be preceded by an English language Abstract and a one or two sentence synopsis of the main findings of the paper for inclusion in the Table of Contents. The Abstract should state concisely the principal results obtained.
The Abstract should be suitable for reproduction by abstracting services without change in wording. It should not repeat information given in the title. Ordinarily 200 words suffice for a full-length article and 100 words for shorter contributions. It should make no reference to tables, diagrams or formulae contained in the paper. It should not contain footnotes. Numerical information given in the Abstract should not be repeated in the text. It should not include the use of `we' or `I'.
Literature references in an Abstract are discouraged. If a reference is unavoidable, it should be sufficiently full within the Abstract for unambiguous identification, e.g. [Smith (1998). J. Synchrotron Rad. 5, 21–31].
Authors should ideally supply at least five keywords.
6. Diagrams and photographs (`figures')
6.1. Design
The choice of tables and figures should be optimized to produce the shortest printed paper consistent with clarity. Duplicate presentation of the same information in both tables and figures is to be avoided, as is redundancy with the text. In a paper only those figures which are strictly necessary to illustrate the techniques or results described will be published: any others will be deposited. The text should be adequate to give the remaining information.
(Rietveld) methods, figures which present the experimental and calculated diffraction profiles of the material studied should also contain the difference profile. As primary diffraction data cannot be satisfactorily extracted from such figures, the basic digital diffraction data should be deposited (see §10.36.2. Quality
Diagrams must be provided in `hard-copy' form, that is, as careful drawings in black ink or as high-quality photographic copies (glazed prints, not mounted). An individual hard-copy diagram must be provided for each figure.
6.3. Colour figures
Figures in colour are accepted at no cost to the author provided that the editor agrees that they improve the understanding of the paper. They should be provided as glossy prints or slides; laser printer or photocopier output will generally be unsatisfactory for colour reproduction. Slides should be accompanied by a photocopy showing the required figure layout.
6.4. Size
Diagrams should be as small as possible consistent with legibility. If possible, each diagram should be provided on a separate sheet of about A4 International Paper Size (210 × 297 mm). They will normally be further reduced by the printer, generally so that the greatest width including lettering is less than the width of a column of the journal (approximately 85 mm). Figures at greater than column width are allowed at editorial discretion.
6.5. Lettering and symbols
Fine-scale details and lettering must be large enough to be clearly legible (not less than 1.2 mm in height) after the whole diagram has been reduced to one column (85 mm) width.
Lettering should be kept to a minimum; quantitative data should be given as tables and descriptive matter should be placed in the legend.
6.6. Numbering and legends
Diagrams and photographs must be numbered as figures in a single series, normally in the order in which they are referred to in the text. A list of the legends (`figure captions') is to be attached to the manuscript.
6.7. Electronic submission of figures
After acceptance of the paper for publication, authors may send figures direct to the editorial office by e-mail or ftp (see §11).
Figures may be sent as HPGL, PostScript, encapsulated PostScript or TIFF formats. The resolution of bitmap graphics should be 1200 d.p.i. Hard-copy figures must be provided in all cases.
7. Tables
7.1. Economy in use of tables
Numerical information is generally most economically presented in tables. Text and diagrams should not be redundant with the tables.
Small tables will normally be set in type while large tables may be photographically reproduced or deposited.
7.2. Design, numbering and size
Tables must be numbered in a single series of arabic numerals, normally in the order in which they are referred to in the text. They should be provided with a caption either at the top or, if the table is to be photographed, on a separate sheet.
Tables should be carefully designed to occupy a minimum of space consistent with clarity. Tables to be photographed should be prepared in single spacing, without excessive space between columns.
8. Nomenclature
8.1. Crystallographic nomenclature
Atoms of the same chemical species within an Chemical and crystallographic numbering should be in agreement wherever possible. When it is necessary to distinguish crystallographically equivalent atoms in different asymmetric units the distinction should be made by lower-case roman numeral superscripts (i.e. i, ii, iii etc.) to the original atom labels. Other details should conform with Acta Crystallographica [Acta Cryst. (1998), A54, 1–6].
should be distinguished by an appended arabic numeral.Authors are encouraged to follow the recommendation of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and use the term et al. (1995). Acta Cryst. A51, 565–569]. The should be expressed as a number in parentheses following the numerical result and should be on the scale of the least significant digits of the result.
abbreviated s.u., in place of the traditional term estimated standard deviation [see SchwarzenbachAnisotropic displacement parameters should be reported as U values with the indices ij given as superscripts [see Trueblood et al. (1996). Acta Cryst. A52, 770–781].
8.2. Nomenclature of chemical compounds etc.
Names of chemical compounds and minerals are not always unambiguous. Authors should therefore quote the chemical formulae of the substances dealt with in their papers.
Chemical formulae and nomenclature should conform to the rules of nomenclature established by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (IUBMB), the International Mineralogical Association and other appropriate bodies. As far as possible the crystallographic nomenclature should correspond to the systematic name.
Any accepted trivial or nonsystematic name may be retained, but the corresponding systematic (IUPAC) name should also be given.
If help on assigning systematic names is sought from advisory sources, authors are requested to indicate the source consulted.
9. References
References to published work must be indicated by giving the authors' names followed immediately by the year of publication, e.g. Neder & Schulz (1998) or (Neder & Schulz, 1998). Where there are three or more authors the reference in the text should be indicated in the form Smith et al. (1998) or (Smith et al., 1998) etc. (all authors should be included in the full list).
At the end of the paper a list giving full details of all references should be appended separately. In the reference list, entries for journals (abbreviated in the style of Chemical Abstracts), books, multi-author books, computer programs, personal communications and undated documents should be arranged alphabetically and conform with the style shown below.
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Note that inclusive page numbers must be given.
When more than ten references are taken from a data base (usually for a structural paper), a condensed reference notation of the Coden type should be used.
10. Supplementary publication procedure (deposition)
10.1. Purpose and scope
Parts of some papers are of interest to only a small number of readers, and the cost of printing these parts is not warranted. Arrangements have therefore been made for such material to be deposited with the IUCr, the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank and the ICDD as appropriate.
Authors are encouraged to submit material for deposit in electronic format. The information to be deposited is at the discretion of the Co-editor and may include:
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10.2. Preparation of material for deposit
Hard-copy material for deposit should:
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10.3. Powder diffraction data
For papers that present the results of powder diffraction profile fitting or i.e. the numerical intensity of each measured point on the profile as a function of scattering angle, will be deposited.
(Rietveld) methods, the primary diffraction data,Co-editors will send powder diffraction data (reported either in the paper or in the deposited material) to the International Centre for Diffraction Data (ICDD), 12 Campus Boulevard, Newtown Square, PA 19073–3273, USA. These data will then be checked and assigned an ICDD reference number which will, where possible, be published in the paper.
10.4. Macromolecular structures
Data deposited should correspond to the level of detail described in the structural paper. For all structural studies of macromolecules, coordinates and structure factors must be deposited with the Protein Data Bank if a total molecular structure has been reported. Authors should supply the Protein Data Bank reference codes for inclusion in the published paper.
11. File transfer
After acceptance of the paper for publication, authors with computer access to the Internet may use anonymous file transfer protocol (ftp) to transfer large electronic files to the Editorial Office in Chester. Files larger than 70 K bytes should be transferred in this way, smaller files can be sent by e-mail to med@iucr.org.
The procedure for transferring files by ftp is described below. Files need to be deposited in a directory called `incoming/s' with a filename constructed from the reference number assigned to the paper. Files containing text in TEX or LATEX should be given the extension .tex, Word files should be given the extensions .doc and RTF files .rtf. Files containing diagrams in HPGL, PostScript, encapsulated PostScript or TIFF format should be given the extensions .hpg, .ps, .eps or .tif, respectively. Multiple files for the same submission should be identified by filenames constructed as ref.id.ext where id indicates the contents, e.g. xz1087.fig1.ps and xz1087.fig2.ps.
The procedure for transferring files is summarized in the box opposite.
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12. Electronic status information
Authors may obtain information about the current status of their papers via the world-wide web at the address http://www.iucr.org/iucr-top/docs/status.html/ (authors will need to provide the Co-editor reference number of their paper and the last name of one of the authors) or by e-mail by sending an e-mail message to status@iucr.org with the Co-editor reference number and the name of one of the authors as the subject line (e.g. JA0325 Smith). The body of the message should be empty. A status report will be returned by e-mail.
13. Reprints
Twenty-five reprints of each published article will be provided to a nominated author free of charge.
Footnotes
1These Notes are also available from http://www.iucr.org/jsr.