IEEE Transactions on Magnetics
Contact: IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Editor in Chief
- Information for Authors
- Article Numbering
- Rules for Conference-Related Papers to be Published in IEEE Transactions on Magnetics.
- IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Online for Members of the IEEE Magnetics Society
- Cumulative Index 1985-2000, Volumes 21-36
- IEEE Magnetics Society Publications Department
Information for Authors
The IEEE Transactions on Magnetics is published 12 times per year. Submitted manuscripts should be in areas of science and technology related to the basic physics of magnetism, magnetic materials, applied magnetics, and magnetic devices.
The submission of a manuscript to the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics implies that it has not been copyrighted or published and that it has not been submitted or accepted for publication elsewhere. All manuscripts submitted for publication are subject to peer review and the established technical and editorial standards of the Transactions. The IEEE Transactions on Magnetics strongly discourages courtesy authorship. It is the obligation of the authors to cite relevant prior work.
The IEEE Transactions on Magnetics publishes articles in the following five categories:
- Classic in Magnetics - re-publications of articles that represent important landmarks in the development of magnetics
- Advances in Magnetics - technical articles providing critical reviews of current topics by noted experts.
- Contributed Papers - unsolicited technical articles of archival values, typically less than 15 printed pages in length.
- Letters - short technical communications of archival value, limited to a maximum of three printed pages in length. Letters are not intended to report preliminary work. Letters receive expeditious review and handling.
- Selected Conference Papers - technical articles of archival value in connection with certain magnetics related conferences. Authors submitting papers in this category must follow specific instructions provided by special conference guest editors and send their manuscripts directly to those editors.
Prospective authors of extended invited papers should contact the Advances in Magnetics Editor. Conferences interested in publishing selected, peer-reviewed papers in IEEE Transactions on Magnetics should contact the Conference Editor (see below).
Procedure for Submitting a Contributed Paper or Letter
An IEEE style guide, "Information for Authors," and other author tools are available at http://www.ieee.org/web/publications/authors/transjnl/. For detailed instructions on the preparation of papers, scroll down to "Word Template for Transactions on Magnetics" and download either TRANSMAG.DOC or TRANSMAG.PDF.
All manuscripts should be submitted electronically on Manuscript Central,http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/transmag-ieee Authors encountering problems should contact transmag{at}ieee.org.
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics does not have page charges. Color printing of figures is available for a minimum fee of $1200 per manuscript. For a precise quote, please contact the IEEE Transactions/Journals Department at trans@ieee.org. There is no charge for color in the electronic version of manuscripts.
It is the policy of the IEEE to own the copyright to the technical contributions it publishes on behalf of the interests of the IEEE, its authors, and their employers, and to facilitate the appropriate reuse of this material by others. To comply with the U.S. Copyright Law, authors are required to sign an IEEE Copyright Form before publication. This form, a copy of which appears at http://www.ieee.org/about/documentation/copyright/cfrmlink.htm, returns to authors and their employers full rights to reuse their materials for their own purposes. Authors will be required to file a copyright form electronically after their paper is accepted for publication.
The articles in this journal are peer reviewed in accordance with the requirements set forth in the IEEE Publication Services and Products Board Operations Manual (https://pspb.ieee.org/images/files/files/opsmanual.pdf). Each published article was reviewed by a minimum of two independent reviewers using a single-blind peer review process, where the identities of the reviewers are not known to the authors, but the reviewers know the identities of the authors. Articles are screened for plagiarism before acceptance.
Article Numbering
Article numbering for a journal is based on subject categories or topic codes provided by the Society/EIC/Editorial Office. These subject categories are two digits in length. Articles numbers used in IEEE publications use seven digits and will be used once in a journal in a given year. The first two digits constitute the subject category or topic code. The next three digits create the sequence within each subject category. The last two digits represent the page length of the article. For example, article number 2200105 would mean that it is using the subject category listed under 22 (22), it is the first article in that category (001), and the article is 5 pages in length (05). Using article numbers can help relieve a backlog by working on multiple issues at the same time (for issue-based publications) since the next issue is not based on finalizing page numbers for the current issue. Each article is sequenced by using a number that is part of the metadata (sequence number tag). This creates the order on IEEE Xplore. A group of sequence numbers can be assigned per category per issue (or volume) since sequence numbers can be skipped and the numbers used would be in sequential order. This number can vary if you know that a certain topic would have many articles.
How are subject categories assigned to an article?
The best practice to assign a subject category would be to have the code be a part of the manuscript number that has been assigned by the EIC or editorial office. IEEE Magnetics Letters assigns the code upfront. When the article is delivered via ScholarOne Manuscripts to IEEE, the staff editor knows how to start the article number by the manuscript number.
Article numbers need to be in sequential order so when the issue is printed or placed online, readers are able to locate the pages easily. Each topic code will have to follow the order of the articles by article number. This means that topic codes follow in chronological order and each topic code will have an order set by when an article is finalized through IEEE Publications. Both of these factors constitute the order of the Table of Contents.
The Society would need to provide the two-digit subject category numbers.
The Society would have a total of 90 numbers. IEEE needs 10 numbers.
Front Material
00 covers
01 contents
02 editorials
03 front matter
04 awards
05 memoriam/obituaries
Back Material
96 comments/replies
97 corrections/errata
98 announcements/filler
99 other (includes index)
The list of subject categories/topic codes can change from year to year, but please note that authors and the community at large will get used to an article numbering scheme and it may get confusing if changed yearly. For the first two years, numbers may probably change with additions and/or subtractions. From experience with the journals currently using article numbers, subject categories have changed numbers the second year; including the IEEE front and back matter. Each journal does not have to have 90 categories or topic codes. It varies from journal to journal. For example, one journal contains 13 subject categories while another uses all 90. Numbers can be skipped and saved for future use.
The list of subject category/topic code numbers should be published in each issue or volume so the readers have a sense of what the numbering scheme means.
Individual article numbers can only be used once in a year (volume). Staff editors will need to keep track of article numbers from issue to issue. Keeping a spreadsheet works best. Article numbers are also stored in the Publishing Operations Production Portal (POPP).
There are two ways to create a Table of Contents. The best practice would be to allot enough sequence numbers per article number. The articles would be on Xplore in chronological order by article number. The Table of Contents would be created following this order. Subject categories could be added to the Table of Contents.
The second way to create a Table of Contents would be to use an index of articles where the categories on the Table of Contents are in a different order than the articles in the issue. This would be the case if an Editor wanted to place the articles in a category in a specific order. The journal itself would be in chronological order, but the order of papers on the Table of Contents would reflect an index of papers.
Article numbering must start at the beginning of a new volume and year and not changed within the year. Indexing services have asked to keep to full volumes as errors may occur. To have articles ready for a new year, please have the list of subject category numbers by October.
For Early Access articles on IEEE Xplore, if the article is a preprint, there will be no article number as the final page count for the article has not been set. Once an article is in an issue or volume, the article number will be finalized. If the article is a rapid post file, when the article is finalized, an article number can be assigned to it. For volume-based publications, the article would then be placed in a volume immediately. For issue-based publications, the article could be placed in a specific issue or rapid posted in the Early Access section if not assigned to a specific issue yet.
For issue-based publications, all articles begin on a right-hand (odd) page. While every attempt will be made, during the production process, to end articles on a left-hand (even) page, if an article ends on an odd page, a blank page will appear at the end of the article in the print journal issue. For single articles paginated one at a time and then placed on Xplore, article running heads or footers can be corrected during final correction stage.
Article Numbering for TMAG 2013
Please Click Here to view the article numbering PDF.
Rules for Publication of Manscripts From Conferences Sponsored by The IEEE Magnetics Society.
A. Statement of Policy
Overview and Statement of Policy. This document describes i) the process of peer review and ii) handling of papers from conferences sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society. These two activities are described in this document in two sections.
The international magnetism community benefits greatly from archival documentation of scientific and technical information presented at conferences sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society. Publications of the IEEE Magnetics Society, i.e., the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (TMAG) and the Xplore Digital Library of Conference Proceedings, contain conference-related papers concerning basic and applied magnetics. These conference-related papers must (a) conform to high standards, (b) have undergone technical peer review, and (c) have been recommended for publication on the basis of such peer review.
To avoid the proliferation in the literature of multiple versions of the same paper, conferences should not require participants to submit manuscripts for publication as a condition for their participation. However, papers that are not actually presented at the conference (no-shows) may not be published. Because conference-related papers have the same status, from the perspective of the Transactions, as regular papers, conferences must allow authors at least four journal pages to give them sufficient space to adequately develop their ideas. Conferences may allow more than four pages, depending on their budget and expected number of accepted papers. Invited papers should be allowed more pages than contributed papers. Conferences should not specify a minimum number of pages. Regular Transactions articles sometimes include author biographies at the end. However, most conferences do not ask authors to include biographies.
Section I: Peer Review Mechanics (for both TMAG and Xplore Digital Library Publications)
A major point of IEEE and Magnetics Society editorial policy is that all manuscripts submitted for publication must be peer reviewed. The inclusion of a presentation in the conference program does not guarantee publication of a paper in the Transactions. The full manuscript, not just the abstract, must be thoroughly reviewed by at least two independent technical referees. The full manuscript reviews are in addition to the initial review of the abstract or digest by the Conference Program Committee. After manuscripts are reviewed, it is the responsibility of the conference Publications Committee to interpret the referees' reports and decide whether to accept the paper as submitted to TMAG, to require revisions and reconsider the paper, to recommend that the paper be published in the Xplore Digital Library of Conference Proceedings or to reject the paper.
Targeted manuscript acceptance rates for the Transactions are 30% for contributed manuscripts and 50% for invited manuscripts, but a lower acceptance rate may be exercised at the discretion of the Conference Organizers. It is advisable to include in the Call for Papers the statement, "All papers, invited as well as contributed, will be evaluated by peer reviewers to determine their suitability for publication."
There are usually strict time constraints placed on the review process for conference-related papers to achieve timely publication. All conference-related manuscripts must be handled by the web-based submission and peer review system, ScholarOne Manuscripts (also referred to as S1), described in more detail in Section D.
The Publications Committee, conference session chairs, or other individuals in charge of reviewer selection must ensure that referees are qualified, technically competent and have agreed to review the paper. They must be provided sufficient time to perform a thorough review. It is recommended that the referees have a good command of English and be willing to make reasonable grammatical corrections. In specific:
- Referees must be contacted in advance. Obtain their agreement to review the papers and communicate to them the expected time frame for the review.
- Referees should not be overloaded. For typical conferences, no referee should be responsible for the review of more than three conference papers. However, as an allowable alternative, some conferences use a select editorial board to review conference papers. Each board member reviews up to 12 papers with no distractions over the course of several days. Each paper must receive at least two reviews.
- The identity of the reviewers should not be disclosed to the authors of the papers. A paper's author should not be placed in a position to select the reviewers for his or her own paper, as in the case, for example, of session chairs charged with the task of selecting reviewers for their sessions.
- Referees should not be asked to review papers at the conference itself, except in special, individual circumstances, such as to help arbitrate a difference in opinion or if a promised review is missing.
- The conference Publications Committee must pay close attention to the details and the mechanics of the review process. It is a good idea for the Publications Committee to work closely with the Program Committee in arranging for reviewers. Session chairs, often relied upon to arrange for reviewers, should be completely informed of their responsibilities.
- Overduplication refers to excessive use of previously-published results, ideas, data and figures in a submission. Editors should use the information on the ScholarOne Manuscripts site and tools provided by IEEE to ensure that all conference submissions conform to the society's standards for original work, and to report any potential problems or concerns to the TMAG Editor-in-Chief. Information concerning the IEEE position on plagiarism may be found at http://www.ieee.org/publications_standards/publications/rights/plagiarism_FAQ.html. The Cross-Check tool allows comparisons of submitted manuscripts against a very large database of published technical papers to provide editors with a summary report that highlights the similarity to previously published work. A free IEEE CrossCheck webinar may be found at https://ieee-elearning.org/CLE/course/view.php?id=187.
This section refers to several different editors: Publications Chair, Editors, IEEE TMAG Conference Editor, and IEEE Associate Editor. These positions are described below.
Each conference will have one publications contact who is responsible for the conference-related papers. This individual is referred to as the Publications Chair. The Publications Chair will coordinate various matters related to the publication of papers in the Transactions. Most conferences have several Publications Committee members (or "Editors") to help process the papers. About 100 papers is the maximum a single Editor should handle; 60 papers is the recommended number. Each Editor should be thoroughly familiar with the paper-preparation instructions. The conference program committee or conference organizer should provide the conference Editors with a list of the confirmed session chair and reviewer names (names, addresses, phone and fax numbers, e-mail addresses). An Editor should not be responsible for processing a paper for which he or she is an author, and the identity of the paper's reviewers should not be disclosed to such an Editor.
Manuscript review and handling will be carried out using the web-based submission and peer review system, ScholarOne Manuscripts (“S1”). The IEEE Magnetics Society has arranged to provide free individual tutorials in the use of S1 for conference publications chairs and editors. These tutorials provide specific information on how to handle the manuscript review process and work flow, and this training is mandatory.
The IEEE TMAG Conference Editor's job is to schedule conference issues, work with each Publications Chair in assuring that IEEE and Transactions editorial requirements are satisfied, help prepare page estimates, and bill the conferences. The current Conference Editor is Prof. Laura H. Lewis, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, Massachusetts 02115. Telephone: +1-617-373-3419. E-mail: lhlewis@northeastern.edu.
The Publications Chair, in coordination with the IEEE TMAG Conference Editor, will normally be in close contact with an IEEE Associate Editor who will process the materials for the conference issue. The IEEE Associate Editor contact is Ms. Meredith Fallon, IEEE Transactions/Journals, 445 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, New Jersey 08855 USA. Telephone: +1-732-562-6872. Fax: +1-732-562-0545. E mail: mfallon@ieee.org.
For detailed instructions on the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics required manuscript format, authors should be informed to download either TRANSMAG.DOC or TRANSMAG.PDF from http://www.ieee.org/web/publications/authors/transjnl/. An IEEE style guide, "Information for Authors," may be found at http://www.ieee.org/documents/info_authors_kit.pdf.
Authors are required to sign an IEEE Copyright Form before publication. This form appears at http://www.ieee.org/publications_standards/publications/rights/copyrightmain.html.
The conference Publications Committee (or conference organizer) may supplement these instructions with additional items specific to the individual conference. Typical supplementary information is the number of pages allowed for contributed and invited papers, the manuscript receipt date authors should include in the footnote on the first page of their papers, deadlines, etc. Authors should be reminded to not submit a paper if they have already submitted (or plan to submit) a similar paper elsewhere.
All conference manuscripts must be submitted for review and final submission online through the Transactions on Magnetics – Conferences site, ScholarOne Manuscripts, accessed at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/magconf-ieee.
The IEEE Transactions on Magnetics is published monthly. The TMAG Conference Editor will work with the conference Publications Chair to determine the most appropriate month for the conference issue. The Transactions publishes several conference issues a year. It may be necessary to adjust the publication month to accommodate commitments to these other conferences. It is wise to arrive at an agreement on a target publication date as early as possible, at least one year in advance. Because of scheduling issues and other constraints, it may be necessary for the TMAG Conference Editor to reschedule conference issues. Conferences are not scheduled for the December issue, which contains the annual index.
The IEEE headquarters deadline for the receipt of all papers for a given issue month must be observed for timely publication. Unless other arrangements are made, the IEEE Associate Editor must receive all the material for a conference issue 14 weeks before the first day of the issue month. It is the responsibility of the conference Publications Chair to ensure that all materials reach the IEEE Associate Editor by the required deadline.
Arrangements between a specific conference and the Transactions for the publication of the conference issue do not constitute or imply sponsorship of the conference by the IEEE or by the IEEE Magnetics Society. Questions regarding conference sponsorship and the level of financial responsibility should be directed to the Chair of the Conference Executive Committee of the Magnetics Society: Prof. Dr. Rudolf Schäfer, Head, Magnetic Microstructures, Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research (IFW), Dresden, Germany: Phone: +49-351-4659-223; Fax: +49-351-4659-541; Email: r.schaefer@ifw-dresden.de.
Beginning in 2016, IEEE has mandated that technically sponsored conferences will incur a charge of $1000. This charge does not apply to those conferences that are financially sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society.
G. Publication of new conferences.
A new policy for publication of papers originating from new conferences was approved by AdCom in November 2014. This policy applies only to “new conferences,” those with fewer than two cycles of Magnetics Society sponsorship or fewer than two cycles of publishing conference-related papers in the Transactions. The guidelines are listed below:
- A new conference must be approved for technical or financial sponsorship by the Magnetics Society’s Conference Executive Committee (contact: Randy Victora, University of Minnesota).
- The proposed conference publications chair must have experience as a conference editor or as a journal editor and be approved by the Transactions Conference Editor (contact: Laura H. Lewis, Northeastern University).
- The conference must target a manuscript rejection rate of at least 50%. (For reference, the rejection rate for regular Transactions articles is about 70%).
- A conference organizer or committee member may be an author on no more than two manuscripts accepted for publication.
- An assessment of the conference’s peer review process will be carried out by the Transactions editors.
The Transactions Conference Editor may modify these requirements for individual conferences based on additional considerations. These guidelines do not apply to small conferences publishing conference-related articles in IEEE Magnetics Letters, where the regular journal editors handle the reviews.
Section 2: Handling of Papers from Conferences Sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society
Conferences that are technically or financially sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society (MagSoc) have the option to publish conference-related manuscripts as regular papers in the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics and as Conference Proceedings in the IEEE Magnetics Society’s Xplore Digital Library. This section summarizes the different options and steps that conferences need to follow to publish manuscripts submitted as part of the conference with the Magnetics Society.
Please note that the editorial standards for acceptance in the Transactions are higher than for the Xplore Digital Library. Conferences should expect that only about one third of submitted manuscripts will be acceptable for the Transactions. It is recommended that conferences publish some manuscripts in the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics and some in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library.
For questions, please contact the Publications Chair of the IEEE Magnetics Society, Petru Andrei.
Contacts and Contact information
Position |
Name |
Email |
Tom Thomson |
||
Associate Publications Chair |
Ron Goldfarb |
|
Associate Publications Chair |
Petru Andrei |
|
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Editor-in-Chief |
Amr Adly |
|
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Conference Editor |
Massimo Pasquale |
|
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Editorial Assistant |
Kristy Virostek |
|
Conference Executive Committee Associate Chair for New and Sponsored Conferences |
Olga Kazakova |
1.How to publish some manuscripts in the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics and some in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library (recommended)
Conference Publication Chair. To publish both in TMAG and as Conference Proceedings, Magnetics Society sponsorship must first be obtained from the Conference Executive Committee (Olga Kazakova). After confirmation of sponsorship, the Conference Publication Chair fills out and submits the IEEE Conference Publication Form approximately one year before the start of the conference but no less than 3 months before the manuscript submission starts. Instructions on how to fill out this form are presented in Fig. 1.
After the IEEE Conference Publication Form is submitted and approved by IEEE and by the Magnetics Society, the Conference Publication Chair will receive an email from IEEE with the Letter of Acquisition, which contains information about the ISBN number of the issue and the Conference ID. A copy of this letter should be emailed to the Publication Chair of the Magnetics Society and to Mr. Franklin Jones.
Authors. Authors must submit the manuscripts for review on the ScholarOne Manuscripts website at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/magconf-ieee. The submission period for all manuscripts is determined through discussion between the Conference Publication Chair, the Publication Chair of the Magnetics Society and the Transactions Executive Editor. All the manuscripts should be formatted according to the template for IEEE Transactions on Magnetics. During the review process, manuscripts that receive high scores from reviewers can be recommended for publication as regular papers in the IEEE Transactions of Magnetics; manuscripts that receive not so high or average scores should be recommended for publication as a Conference Proceedings paper in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. Manuscripts that receive low scores should be rejected.
Once a manuscript is recommended for publication in the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics or as a Proceedings paper in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library, the authors may fill out the copyright form and submit the final version of the manuscript. If the authors do not fill out and submit the copyright form, the manuscripts will be withdrawn from consideration.
Editorial Board. The conference Publications Chair and the conference Editorial Board, if the conference has one, should be approved in advance by the Associate Chair for Conference Publications.
Publication of regular manuscripts in TMAG. Manuscripts accepted for publication will appear as regular articles in TMAG. The issue in which these manuscripts appear will not contain any information related to the conference such as the Chairman’s Forward, the Publication Chair’s Preface, or other information about the location and dates of the conference. This information will appear on the front pages of Conference Proceedings (see next section).
Publication of Conference Proceedings. Manuscripts accepted for publication as Conference Proceedings will appear in the IEEE Magnetics Society’s Xplore Digital Library approximately 3 months after the conference. The front pages of the Proceedings Issue will contain the Chairman’s Foreword, the Publication Chair’s Preface, and information about the location and date of the conference. These manuscripts will be explicitly designated as peer-reviewed. Please note that papers recommended for publication in the Magnetics Society’s Xplore Digital Library will be rejected if submitted to the Transactions as a regular paper.
Fig. 1 Instructions on how the Conference Publication Chair should to complete the IEEE Conference Publication Form
Once the manuscript review process ends, the Conference Publication Chair contacts the Publication Chair of the IEEE Magnetics Society, who will provide a report of the manuscripts submitted for publication as Conference Proceedings and provide electronic copies of each manuscript to the Conference Publication Chair. The Conference Publication Chair confirms if the manuscripts should indeed be published (for instance, a manuscript should be removed if it was not presented at the conference) and informs the Publications Chair of the MagSoc. After the final list of manuscripts is confirmed, the Publications Chair of the IEEE Magnetics Society will work with the Conference Publication Chair to submit the IEEE packing list (electronic list of papers) to IEEE Conference Publications. IEEE Conference Publications requests that the final IEEE packing list be received within one month after the conference ends.
Notes: (1) A manuscript cannot be published both as a regular paper in the IEEE Transactions and as a Conference Proceedings in the IEEE Digital Library. (2) All manuscripts accepted for publication in the IEEE Transaction on Magnetics and in the IEEE Digital Library will be screened for plagiarism using the CrossCheck (iThenticate) tool. All manuscripts must contain sufficient new material to be considered for publication.
2.How to publish manuscripts only as Conference Proceedings in the MagSoc’s Digital Library
The Magnetics Society is working on offering the option to publish conference-related manuscripts only in the IEEE Digital Library, without consideration for publication in the IEEE Transaction on Magnetics. If you need more information please contact the Publication Chair of the IEEE Magnetics Society.
3.Billing information and Publication Costs
All conference-related papers are published electronically and are accessible by IEEE/Magnetics Society Members. Only pages published in TMAG are subjected to billing; charges for pages published in IEEE Magnetics Society’s Xplore Digital Library are currently waived. While the Magnetics Society will develop a price model in the near future, it will always be more economical to publish Conference Proceedings than to publish in TMAG.
The total cost to conferences for publishing manuscripts in the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics depends on the total number of pages published. In general, the cost is $40 per published page. Conferences that are financially sponsored by the Magnetics Society are entitled to up to a one-page subsidy per published manuscript in proportion to the percentage of financial sponsorship. The 2018 formula for charges billed to the Conference for publication in TMAG is given by: C = 40·P where C = amount to be paid by conference, in U.S. dollars, P = number of technical pages.
The conference will be invoiced directly by the TMAG Conference Editor around the time that the conference issue is scheduled to be published. Please arrange to submit a check payable to IEEE against the invoice. Bank transfer (wire) instructions are also provided. Purchase orders will not be accepted. It is suggested that foreign conferences maintain a U.S. bank account, which perhaps can receive pre-registration fees from U.S. attendees, from which to pay the cost of publication.
Conferences that publish papers in the Transactions will be eligible for a page subsidy in the form of a reduction in the publications billing charge. The subsidy will correspond to 1 page per paper, but the amount of the subsidy will be proportional to the level of conference sponsorship with financial responsibility by the IEEE Magnetics Society. To receive the subsidy, a conference must require authors to submit papers of at least 4 journal pages in length.
For information on conference sponsorship and level of financial responsibility, see paragraph I. If you have questions about the subsidy, please contact the TMAG Conference Editor (Section C).
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Online for Members of the IEEE Magnetics Society
IEEE Xplore http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/ provides online access to all IEEE publications. If your institution subscribes, you probably can access Xplore from your office computer.
All members of the Magnetics Society can access the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics using any Web connection. Go to http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/ and click on "Establish IEEE Web Account." Once you have a username and password, click on "Journals and Magazines" on the Xplore home page. Click on "Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on" and select the volume of interest. When you choose to view a full-text article, you will be asked to enter your username and password. (Before you do, make sure cookies are enabled on your Web browser.) You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader.
You may also:
- Browse the complete collection of tables of contents of all IEEE transactions, journals, magazines, conference proceedings, and standards;
- Search and view all IEEE abstract/citation records starting from 1988;
- Browse, search, and view full-text articles of IEEE Spectrum magazine.
Xplore has all articles published in IEEE Transactions on Magnetics since Volume 1, Number 1 (1965).
For additional information, refer to the Frequently Asked Questions on the IEEE Xplore home page.
Cumulative Index 1985-2000, Volumes 21-36
The IEEE Transactions on Magnetics is pleased to make available to its readers its latest cumulative author and subject indices. The files are in PDF and are searchable with the Adobe Acrobat "Find" function. These PDF files are also available on IEEE Xplore; see Volume 37, Issue 6, Part 2, November 2001.
Author Index (4 MB)
Subject Index (7 MB)
These cumulative index files are also available to Magnetics Society members on IEEE Xplore. Click here to access them.
Cumulative indices copyright © 2001 by IEEE, all rights reserved.
IEEE Magnetics Society Publications Department
Chair: Massimo Pasquale, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Italy, mpas@ieee.org
Associate Chair: Ron B. Goldfarb, National Institute of Standards and Technology, goldfarb@boulder.nist.gov
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Editors
Name | Company / Institution, | |
AMR ADLY | amradly@ieee.org | Editor-in-Chief, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt |
NICOLETA LUPU | nicole@phys-iasi.ro | Associate Editor-in-Chief, National Institute of R&D for Technical Physics, Romania |
YACINE AMARA | yacine.amara@univ-lehavre.fr | Université du Havre, Le Havre, France |
METIN AYDIN | metin.aydin@kocaeli.edu.tr | Kocaeli University, Turkey |
ANOUAR BELAHCEN | anouar.belahcen@aalto.fi | Aalto University, Finland |
C. SINGH BHATIA | exit_ibm@yahoo.com | National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore |
JONATHAN BIRD | bird@pdx.edu | Portland State University, OR, USA |
CRISTINA BRAN | Cristina.bran@icmm.csic.es | Institute of Materials Science of Madrid, Spain |
MARIO CARPENTIERI | mario.carpentieri@poliba.it | Politechnico di Bari, Bari, Italy |
J. R. CRUZ | jcruz@ou.edu | The University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, USA |
FABIO DA SILVA | fabio@wavsens.com | Wavsens, Boulder, Colorado, USA |
KENT DAVEY | kdavey@ieee.org | The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA |
DANIELE DAVINO | davino@unisannio.it | University of Sannio, 82100 Benevento, Italy |
YIMING DENG | dengyimi@egr.msu.edu | Michigan State University, Lansing USA |
DAVID DORRELL | dorrelld@ukzn.ac.za | University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa |
LUC DUPRÉ | luc.dupre@ugent.be | Universiteit Gent, Ghent, Belgium |
SILVIO DUTZ | silvio.dutz@tu-ilmenau.de | Technische Universität Ilmenau, Germany |
JUAN FERNANDEZ-DE-CASTRO | juan_fdc@hotmail.com | Seagate Corporation, Bloomington, Minnesota, USA |
ALESSANDRO FORMISSANO | alessandro.formisano@unicampania.it | University of Campania, Italy |
GENNADY (GARY) FRIEDMAN | gf29@drexel.edu | Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA |
KEISUKE FUJISAKI | fujisaki@toyota-ti.ac.jp | Toyota Technological Institute, Nagoya, Japan |
ANNA GIORDANO | anna.giordano@unime.it | University of Messina, Italy |
KAY HAMEYER | kay.hameyer@iem.rwth-aachen.de | RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany |
MIN-FU HSIEH | mfhsieh@mail.ncku.edu.tw | National Chen Kung University, Taiwan |
SCOOTER JOHNSON | scooter.d.johnson@gmail.com | Honeywell, Broomfield, CO, USA |
ATILA KÁKAY | a.kakay@hzdr.de | Institute of Ion Beam Physics and Materials Research, Dresden, Germany |
MIKHAIL KOSTYLEV | Mikhail.kostylev@uwa.edu.au | University of Western Australia |
APHRODITE KTENA | ktenaa@gmail.com | Technological Education Institute of Central Greece, Chalkida, Greece |
BIJOY KUMAR KUANR | bijoykuanr@mail.jnu.ac.in | Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India |
FREDERIC MAZALEYRAT | mazaleyr@ens-paris-saclay.fr | Ecole Normale Superiore, Paris Saclay, France |
YEVGEN (EUGENE) MELIKHOV | melikhov@cardiff.ac.uk | Cardiff University, Cardiff, U.K |
MANI MINA | mmina@iastate.edu | Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA |
S. N. PIRAMANAYAGAM (PREM) | prem_SN@dsi.a-star.edu.sg | Data Storage Institute, Singapore |
ANDREI SLAVIN | slavin@oakland.edu | Oakland University, Michigan, USA |
NIAN SUN | www.northeastern.edu/sunlab | Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA |
JAN K. SYKULSKI | jks@soton.ac.uk | University of Southampton, Southampton, U.K. |
CIRO VISONE | visone@unina.it | Università di Napoli Federico II, Italy |
MASAHIRO YAMAGUCHI | yamaguti@ecei.tohoku.ac.jp | Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan |
ZHEN ZHANG | zhangz@eee.hku.hk | Tianjin University, China |
ALBRECHT JANDER, Advances in Magnetics Editor | jander@eecs.orst.edu | Advances in Magnetics Editor, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA |
MASSIMO PASQUALE, Conference Editor | m.pasquale@inrim.it | Conference Editor, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRIM), Torino, Italy |
Prospective authors of extended invited papers should contact the Advances in Magnetics Editor. Conferences interested in publishing selected, peer-reveiwed papers in IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MAGNETICS should contact the Conference Editor.
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Editorial Board
J. A. BAIN |
Y. K. KIM |
N. D. RIZZO |
Magnetics Society Newsletter Editor
contact the newsletter editor
Magnetics Society Book Publishing Liaisons
Liesl Folks
1. The CrossCheck tool allows comparisons of submitted manuscripts against a very large database of published technical papers to provide editors with a summary report that highlights the similarity to previously published work. A free IEEE CrossCheck webinar may be found at https://ieee-elearning.org/CLE/course/view.php?id=187.