Roll No
Roll No
Information
for Authors
IEEE P ERIODICALS
T RANSACTIONS /J OURNALS D EPARTMENT
445 H OES L ANE
P.O. B OX 1331
P ISCATAWAY, NJ 08855-1331
R EVISED : 1/03
®
INFORMATION FOR IEEE TRANSACTIONS,
JOURNALS, AND LETTERS AUTHORS
Table of Contents
2
adhere to any and all information-release clauses in those F. Author Proofs
contracts. IEEE assumes that meeting government contract The author will receive a final proof of his/her manuscript
obligations satisfies the requirements of ITAR compliance. as it will appear in the printed publication. The proofs are
Periodicals editors should be sure to make mention of usually accompanied by the IEEE Page Charges and Reprint
these responsibilities when soliciting submissions. Detailed Order Form dependent upon a society’s requirements for its
information on ITAR (including the U.S. Munitions List) publication.
can be found on-line at www.siaed.org/WebITAR.pdf. In a case where an author has four-color graphics, the
Additional information can also be found at society may require that the author pay the extra charges and
www.ieee.org/organizations/tab/export_compliance.html. For he/she will be notified of that charge.
assistance with this issue, e-mail [email protected]. The author is requested to provide corrections to the final
B. Formats proof of his/her paper within a few days after receipt of the
author proofs.
IEEE Transactions generally contain major manuscripts
approximately 8 to 10 printed pages or 24 to 30 double-spaced
G. Reprint Requests
pages.
IEEE Journals follow the same length criteria as Trans- At the time the author receives the final proofs of his/her
actions, but often are focused on selected topics and more paper, he/she should also receive an IEEE Page Charges
specialized areas of interest. and Reprint Order Form. This should be completed and
IEEE Letters are generally short papers of approximately returned with the proofs or sent directly to the IEEE Reprints
three to four printed pages or nine double-spaced pages. Department, 445 Hoes Lane, P.O. Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ
08855-1331 USA; fax: +1 732 981 8062.
C. Peer Review
After the Editor/Editor-in-Chief of a publication determines H. Printed Issue
that a paper is suitable for his/her publication, it will be Once the issue of a publication has been printed, a compli-
forwarded to a group of reviewers selected for their expertise mentary copy will be sent to the author.
in a given field. If an author has requested reprints, these will be sent
During this process, an author is often asked to expand, separately after the issue has been mailed.
rewrite, or explain further the content of his/her paper. It is
not uncommon that an author is asked to provide another draft I. No Returns
with the suggested changes for further review. The IEEE does not return disks, graphics, photographs, or
paper copies of the manuscripts used in the production process
D. Final Acceptance of its issues.
Once a manuscript has received the final approval of the
reviewers and Editor-in-Chief, the author will be notified III. SUBMISSION PROCEDURES
and sent an IEEE Copyright Form. He/she will be asked to
prepare the manuscript for final electronic publication and to FOR PEER REVIEW
possibly complete an additional information form. (See details
in following sections.) A. Transactions, Journals, and Letters
Papers submitted for publication in the IEEE Transac-
E. Preparation of Electronic and Final Manuscripts tions, Journals, and Letters should be sent directly to the
The author will need to check the electronic guidelines on Editor(s)-in-Chief of the specific publication in which the
final preparation for production of manuscripts and graphics. author wishes to publish. These names and addresses can
be found on the inside covers of the publication or at
Note: A manuscript cannot enter the final production
www.ieee.org/organization/pubs/guide.html. Also found on
process at IEEE unless a copyright form has been signed
the inside covers or in the ending pages of the publications
and forwarded with the manuscript.
are instructions on how to prepare the manuscript for Peer
If an author’s disk or e-mailed manuscript cannot be pro- Review. General manuscript preparation procedures can be
cessed due to technical difficulties, he/she will be notified found in Section IV.
by the IEEE Transactions/Journals Department and asked to
provide another copy. B. Proceedings of the IEEE
If the author’s graphics are not reproducible, he/she will be The PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE publishes comprehensive,
contacted by the IEEE Transactions/Journals Department and in-depth review, tutorial, and survey papers for technically
asked to provide a new set of graphics for the manuscript or knowledgeable readers who are not necessarily specialists
to sign a disclaimer. in the subjects being treated. The papers are of long-range
If an author cannot provide an electronic version of the interest and broad significance. Applications and technolog-
manuscript, arrangements can be made to handle a paper copy ical issues, as well as theory, are emphasized. The topics
version. include all aspects of electrical and computer engineering and
3
science. From time to time, papers on managerial, histori- Each reference number should be enclosed by square brack-
cal, economic, and ethical aspects of technology are pub- ets. In text, citations of references may be given simply as “in
lished. Papers are authored by recognized authorities and [1] . . . ”, rather than as “in reference [1] . . . ”. Similarly, it
reviewed by experts. They include extensive introductions is not necessary to mention the authors of a reference unless
written at a level suitable for the nonspecialist, with ample the mention is relevant to the text. It is almost never useful to
references for those who wish to probe further. Several issues give dates of references in text. These will usually be deleted
a year are devoted to a single subject of special impor- by Staff Editors if included.
tance. Footnotes or other words and phrases that are not part of the
Prospective authors, before preparing a full-length manu- reference format do not belong on the reference list. Phrases
script, are urged to submit a proposal containing a description such as “For example,” should not introduce references in the
of the topic and its importance to PROCEEDINGS readers, a list, but should instead be given in parentheses in text, followed
detailed outline of the proposed paper and its type of coverage, by the reference number, i.e., “For example, see [5].”
and a brief biography showing the authors’ qualifications Sample correct formats for various types of references are
for writing the paper. A proposal can be reviewed most as follows.
efficiently if it is sent electronically to the Managing Editor Books:
at [email protected]. If the proposal receives a favorable [1] G. O. Young, “Synthetic structure of industrial plastics,”
review, the author will be encouraged to prepare the pa- in Plastics, 2nd ed., vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed. New York:
per for publication consideration through the normal review McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.
process. [2] W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems. Belmont,
CA: Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE
445 Hoes Lane Periodicals:
P.O. Box 1331 [3] J. U. Duncombe, “Infrared navigation—Part I: An assess-
Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331 USA ment of feasibility,” IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol.
Fax: +1 732 562 5456 ED-11, pp. 34–39, Jan. 1959.
[4] E. P. Wigner, “Theory of traveling-wave optical laser,”
IV. GENERAL MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION Phys. Rev., vol. 134, pp. A635–A646, Dec. 1965.
[5] E. H. Miller, “A note on reflector arrays,” IEEE Trans.
A. Consecutive Numbering of Parts Antennas Propagat., to be published.
All manuscript pages, footnotes, equations, and references Articles from Conference Proceedings (published):
should be labeled in consecutive numerical order. Illustrations [6] D. B. Payne and J. R. Stern, “Wavelength-switched pas-
and tables should be cited in text in numerical order. See sively coupled single-mode optical network,” in Proc.
Section IV-G of this guide. IOOC-ECOC, 1985, pp. 585–590.
B. Manuscript Formats Papers Presented at Conferences (unpublished):
See copies of the publications for examples of proper paper [7] D. Ebehard and E. Voges, “Digital single sideband detec-
formats and requirements for the types of papers accepted for tion for interferometric sensors,” presented at the 2nd Int.
each publication (i.e., Full Papers, Letters, Short Papers, etc.). Conf. Optical Fiber Sensors, Stuttgart, Germany, 1984.
Full length papers generally consist of the title, byline,
Standards/Patents:
author affiliation, footnote (including any financial support ac-
knowledgment), index terms, abstract, nomenclature if present, [8] G. Brandli and M. Dick, “Alternating current fed power
introduction, body, conclusions, reference list, list of figures supply,” U.S. Patent 4 084 217, Nov. 4, 1978.
and table captions, and original figures and tables for repro- Technical Reports:
duction. A paper may also include appendixes, a glossary of [9] E. E. Reber, R. L. Mitchell, and C. J. Carter, “Oxygen
symbols, and an acknowledgment of nonfinancial support. absorption in the Earth’s atmosphere,” Aerospace Corp.,
Los Angeles, CA, Tech. Rep. TR-0200 (4230-46)-3, Nov.
C. Abstract
1968.
The abstract should be limited to 50–200 words and should
concisely state what was done, how it was done, principal
results, and their significance. The abstract will appear later in E. References—Electronic Sources
various abstracts journals and should contain the most critical The guidelines for citing electronic information as offered
information of the paper. below are a modified illustration of the adaptation by the
International Standards Organization (ISO) documentation sys-
D. References
tem and the American Psychological Association (APA) style.
A numbered list of references must be provided at the end of Three pieces of information are required to complete each
the paper. The list should be arranged in the order of citation reference: 1) protocol or service; 2) location where the item
in text, not in alphabetical order. List only one reference per is to be found; and 3) item to be retrieved. It is not necessary
reference number. to repeat the protocol (i.e., http) in Web addresses after
4
“Available” since that is stated in the URL. photos. All line drawings and photos should be in black and
Books: Author. (year, month day). Title. (edition) [Type of white, unless special arrangements have been made to process
medium]. volume (issue). Available: site/path/file them in color.
Example: If color is to be reproduced, the author must agree to
[1] J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks. (2nd ed.) [Online]. accept responsibility for payment of the costs for separations
Available: http://www.atm.com and printing before any processing is performed. The author
must provide a method of payment as well, either through
Journals: Author. (year, month). Title. Journal. [Type of their organization or by credit card. The current cost for
medium]. volume (issue), pages. Available: site/path/file color reproduction is a flat printing fee of US$1,045.00 plus
Example: US$125.00 per piece of color artwork. (Please note that this
[2] R. J. Vidmar. (1992, Aug.). On the use of atmospheric cost does not include the ordering of reprints.)
plasmas as electromagnetic reflectors. IEEE Trans. Please use consistent typefaces on all your figures. Figures
Plasma Sci. [Online]. 21(3), pp. 876–880. Available: will be reduced to make the smallest typesize 8 points.
http://www.halcyon.com/pub/journals/21ps03-vidmar Generally one or two typefaces should suffice. It is suggested
Papers Presented at Conferences: Author. (year, month). that you use either Times Roman or Sans Serif. For best results,
Title. Presented at Conference title. [Type of Medium]. all of your figures should be the same size (width length)
Available: site/path/file whenever possible. For scanned graphics the original material
Example: should be no larger than 22 28 cm.
[3] PROCESS Corp., MA. Intranets: Internet technologies On graphs, show only the coordinate axes, or at most the
deployed behind the firewall for corporate productivity. major grid lines, to avoid a dense result after reduction.
Presented at INET96 Annu. Meeting. [Online]. Available: DO NOT put boxes around your figures to enclose them.
http://home.process.com/Intranets/wp2.htp Captions should be included as a separate list at the end of
the paper.
Reports and Handbooks: Author. (year, month). Title.
Corrections cannot be made on a graphic. New corrected
Company. City, State or Country. [Type of Medium].
copies (including tables) must be submitted by the author when
Available: site/path/file
returning the proofs.
Example:
[4] S. L. Talleen. (1996, Apr.). The Intranet Ar- G. Section Headings
chitecture: Managing information in the new
paradigm. Amdahl Corp., CA. [Online]. Available: Primary section headings within papers are enumerated
http://www.amdahl.com/doc/products/bsg/intra/infra/html by Roman numerals and are centered above the text. For
the purpose of typing the manuscript only, primary headings
Computer Programs and Electronic Documents: ISO rec- should be capital letters. Sample:
ommends that capitalization follow the accepted practice for
the language or script in which the information is given. I. PRIMARY HEADING
Example: (TEXT)
[5] A. Harriman. (1993, June). Compendium of genealog- Secondary section headings are enumerated by capital letters
ical software. Humanist. [Online]. Available e-mail: followed by periods (“A.”, “B.”, etc.) and are flush left above
HUMANIST@NYVM Message: get GENEALOGY their sections. The first letter of each word is capitalized. In
REPORT print the headings will be in italics. Sample:
A. Secondary Heading
F. Figures, Tables, and Captions List
(TEXT)
All graphics should be submitted as separate items from
the body of your paper on separate sheets of paper or on Tertiary section headings are enumerated by Arabic numer-
disk. IEEE Transactions/Journals Department does not provide als followed by a parenthesis. They are indented, run into the
drafting or art services. Thus, the better the quality of the text in their sections, and are followed by a colon. The first
material submitted, the better the published result. letter of each important word is capitalized. Sample:
Line art, graphs, charts, tables, drawings, photos, and gray-
1) Tertiary Heading: (TEXT)
scale diagrams will be scanned electronically for final produc-
tion or you may submit them as TIFF, PostScript, or Encap-
Quaternary section headings are rarely necessary but are
sulated PostScript files (see Section V-D for more information
perfectly acceptable if required. They are identical to tertiary
on electronic graphics). If submitting for scanning, all graph-
headings except that lowercase letters are used as labels and
ics should be original proofs and not photocopies. Detailed
only the first letter of the heading is capitalized. Sample:
instructions on the preparation of electronic graphics may
be found at www.ieee.org/organization/pubs/transactions/eic- a) Quaternary heading: (TEXT)
guide.pdf.
Whenever possible photos should be glossy prints with no Enumeration of section headings is often desirable, but is not
screening. Laser prints will not reproduce as well as original a requirement. If an author does choose to enumerate section
5
headings, then ALL levels of section headings in the paper including those that need not be defined, is given in Appendix
should be enumerated. Similarly, if section headings are not to II of this guide.
be enumerated, the choice should be consistent for all headings
in the paper. In either case, the remaining style rules for each V. FINAL PREPARATION FOR PUBLICATION
level of section heading should be followed.
A. Electronic Disk Preparation
H. Mathematical Notation
The IEEE requests that all authors submit their final man-
To avoid errors in editing and typesetting, authors should uscripts in electronic and hard copy (two copies) form. How-
clearly identify subscripts, superscripts, Greek letters, and ever, considering the myriad of word processors on the market
other symbols. Add margin notes or other explanations wher- (public domain included) and disk formats available through-
ever necessary. It is especially important to distinguish clearly out the world, the following guidelines and suggestions have
between the following terms. been set forth in an effort to expedite the production process.
a) Capital and lowercase letters when used as symbols. General Guidelines: The following is a list of general
b) Zero and the letter “O.” guidelines for the submission of electronic media by prospec-
c) The lowercase letter “l,” and numeral one (1), and the tive authors.
prime sign ( ). • The operating system and word processing software used
d) The letters “k” and (kappa), “u” and (mu), “v” and to produce your document should be noted on your disk
(nu), and “n” and (eta). or e-mail (e.g., DOS / Word). In the case of UNIX media,
A wavy line under a character or letter indicates boldface the method of extraction (i.e., tar, bar, restore, etc.) should
type. (Bold type should be indicated for certain vectors and also be noted.
matrices.) • PostScript and Acrobat PDF files are not acceptable
A straight line under a character or letter indicates italic because the files are simply pictures of the pages and
type. (Italic type should be indicated for all text variables.) cannot be edited.
Break equations to fit in a space no wider than 21 picas or • Disks should be labeled with file name(s) relating to the
3.5″ in width. manuscript.
Avoid ambiguities in equations and fractions in text through • Check that your files are complete. Include: abstract,
careful use of parentheses, brackets, solidi (slants), etc. Note index terms, text, references, footnotes, biographies, and
that in text, fractions are usually “broken down” to fit on one figure captions.
line and confusion can result if terms are not properly labeled. • The hardcopy should exactly match its companion disk.
The conventional order of brackets is {[()]}. Any changes made to your files should be reflected on
IEEE Transactions style dictates that the only punctuation the manuscript.
used at the end of a displayed equation is a period. There is, • No program files should be included on the disk.
however, other punctuation permitted in the equation itself and • Graphics should be on a disk separate from the text as
between an equation and its condition; there is a comma and graphics and text are processed separately and graphics
2em space before the condition. cannot be extracted from the text.
For simplicity in international usage, IEEE practice is to • Include a flat ASCII version on the disk with the word-
separate numbers of more than four digits into groups of three processor version, if possible.
on either side of the decimal point, separated by a space. If • Please package disks in such a way as to minimize
the magnitude of a number is less than one, the decimal sign possible damage in the mail.
should be preceded by a zero. Examples: • Try to adhere to the accepted style of the Transac-
tions/Journal as much as possible. Of particular impor-
12 531 7465 9.2163 0.102 834 tance here is the reference list. Please try to follow the
format as described in Section IV-E and IV-F of this
document.
Use of the multidot ( ) rather than the multi when
multiplying by powers of ten in equations or text is at the Preferred Formats: For the most accurate and
author’s discretion. efficient transferral of your manuscript, especially those
containing extensive mathematics, use TEX or LATEX
I. Units and Abbreviations programs. An IEEE LATEX style file can be found at
www.ieee.org/organizations/pubs/authors.html.
The International System of Units (SI units) is advocated
The following points are important to remember when
for use in IEEE publications. Refer to the units list provided
in Appendix I of this guide for information on preferred usage submitting electronic manuscripts (compuscripts) in TEX or
of units, conversion factors, etc. LATEX.
Unit symbols should be used with measured quantities, i.e., • Please include all macros or definitions that are required
1 mm, but not when unit names are used in text without to produce your document, references, biographies, index
quantities, i.e., “a few millimeters.” terms, etc., in one file.
Acronyms and abbreviations should be defined the first time • Remember, IEEE Transactions style dictates a 21-pica
they are used in text. A list of acronyms and abbreviations, (3.5-inch) column width. If mathematical phrases are
6
produced with this in mind, they are apt to appear more All line drawings and photos should be in black and white,
aesthetically pleasing in the final version. unless special arrangements have been made for four-color
• When using TEX, avoid using a matrix routine for any- processing. Please place all callouts in the figures.
thing other than a matrix. Use \eqalignno or \displaylines Please do not place the figure caption on the graphic
for aligning series of equations. intended for scanning, but do number each graphic on the
An IEEE Word style file can also be found at http://www.ieee. back of the page. Provide captions on a separate page or at
org/organizations/pubs/authors.html. When using this style the end of the electronic file.
Do not put boxes around your figures to enclose them.
file, use the Word equation editor for equations and symbols.
Corrections cannot be made on a graphic by IEEE staff. If
Also, if your word file contains graphics, please remember to
corrections or changes are necessary, a new graphic, reflecting
also submit the graphics as separate files.
the correction or change, must be submitted by the author.
Acceptable Media: The IEEE will accept the following.
• Any IBM-PC (or 100% compatible) disk format D. Author Supplied Electronic Graphics
(3.5″ / 720k / 1.44Mb). You may submit TIFF, PostScript (PS), or Encapsulated
• Macintosh disk format (low and high density). PostScript (EPS) files. If you plan to do this, please
• Zip disk. request our “IEEE Transactions/Journals Guidelines for
• CD-ROM. Author Supplied Electronic Graphics” (also available at:
• E-Mail. http://www.ieee.org/organizations/pubs/transjour/graphguide/).
If you are in doubt, please do not hesitate to inquire using In summary your graphics should:
[email protected]. 1) be in TIFF, PS, or EPS format;
2) have all the required tags present;
B. E-Mail Preparation 3) be submitted on separate disks from the manuscript;
4) byte order can be either Intel or Motorola—that is,
Upon completion of the review process and with the ap- either IBM or Macintosh TIFF, PS, or EPS files are
proval of the Editor-in-Chief, an author may wish to e-mail acceptable;
the electronic version of his or her manuscript to the Staff 5) be named according to the guidelines;
Editor at IEEE. The following set of guidelines should be 6) use lower case letters when naming all figures, tables,
followed to ensure a smooth transition and subsequent upload and biography photos;
to the IEEE electronic publishing environment. 7) be sized for a column width of 21 picas (page-wide
General Guidelines: graphics can be no wider than 43 picas wide; the
1) Files should not be e-mailed to the IEEE Staff Edi- maximum depth of a graphic is 58 picas; you should
tor without the prior knowledge and approval of the allow space for the caption and any labels);
Transactions Editor-in-Chief. 8) be submitted as a black and white file if it is to appear
2) The transmitted file should reflect the exact content as black and white;
of the final manuscript, including captions, abstracts, 9) be submitted as a color file if it is to appear in color;
references, and biographies. 10) be prepared at one of the recommended resolutions:
3) A short message should accompany each transmitted 600 dpi, 1 bit/sample for line art; 220 dpi, 8 bits/sample
file, clearly identifying the following: for figures with grayscale shading and black and white
a) the name of the Transactions; photographs; and 400 dpi for color graphics;
b) author’s name; 11) be submitted on a PC formatted disk, if possible, if you
c) software used to create manuscript, e.g., TEX, LATEX, created your graphics on a Macintosh;
etc. 12) include a printed copy of your graphics so that we can
4) No encoding is necessary to accommodate the size of verify that we have the proper version of each graphic;
files. 13) contain only the image and not the caption text;
5) When e-mailing TEX, LATEX, etc., please remember to 14) use consistent type size in all figures and tables;
also e-mail any macros or definitions used to create 15) combine figures when appropriate;
the manuscript. 16) use one of the following compression methods, if
6) Two paper copies of the e-mail file along with the necessary:
original figures and photos should be sent to the IEEE
Staff Editor. • compress, pkzip, stuffit, gzip
17) not be embedded in the text of your paper.
C. Graphics Preparation
Line art, graphs, charts, tables, drawings, photos, and gray- E. Proofs
scale diagrams will be scanned electronically for final produc- Authors will receive proofs of their papers prior to pub-
tion. To have clear, precise reproduction, all graphics should lication. These must be checked and returned immediately.
be original and not photocopies. Changes should be minor corrections only. Care should be
Graphics should be presented as separate items from the text taken to answer all author queries. To avoid publication
of the paper. Photos must be glossy prints with no screens. delays, Journal Editors or the IEEE Transactions/Journals
7
Department should be notified of any anticipated changes in publication may be permitted to request Page Charges as
author addresses or absences that may occur during production. well. Please check the wording of your IEEE Page Charges
Always clearly indicate publication title and issue on all and Reprint Order Form carefully.
correspondence with the IEEE.
C. Ordering Reprints
The IEEE Page Charges and Reprint Order returned Forms
VI. REPRINTS AND PAGE CHARGES include reprint ordering information. Please see that sheet for
details.
Some Transactions and Journals carry page charges and/or
We must have the IEEE Page Charges and Reprint Order
overlength paper charges for published papers. Consult indi-
Form and Purchase Order returned no later than one week
vidual publication covers for specific policies. Page charge
from the date you return your manuscript. We must receive
information is also given on the IEEE Page Charges and
orders before the issue goes to press. We reserve the right to
Reprint Order Form that accompanies the author’s proofs.
impose a surcharge of 25% on late orders. Normally, reprints
A. Page Charges can be expected approximately four to six weeks after the
date of publication.
IEEE Policy 6.9 permits some types of periodicals to levy If early billing is needed to accommodate the deadline
Page Charges. If your publication is one of these, it is your of a contract or grant, please call the Reprints Depart-
company or institution, not you, which is being asked for ment at +1 732 562 3941 or +1 732 562 3917, or e-mail
support. Payment is not obligatory nor is it a prerequisite [email protected].
for publication. Such support is based on the philosophy All invoicing originates from the Publications Administra-
that the usual research or development project is complete tion Department at the IEEE Service Center, 445 Hoes Lane,
only when results have been disseminated to the engineering P.O. Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331 USA.
and scientific community and that it is thus proper that the
financing of the project include funds to support, in part, the
D. Billing/Ordering Information for Authors
cost of publication. Page charges are widely used throughout
and Purchasing Departments
the scientific publishing community and are widely accepted.
For example, most U.S. Government agencies recognize the Nearly all organizations require a Purchase Order (P.O.)
payment of page charges as a legitimate part of the cost of to process an order or handle billing of any kind. Please help
performing research and development work under Government complete the loop between your organization’s procedures and
contracts. ours. In order to facilitate your receipt of reprints, a P.O.
Page charges are levied for each printed page. Payment is needed. Your organization most likely will need a P.O.
entitles the author to 100 reprints (covers are not included). number in order to accept shipment of your reprints. We urge
Self-covers and additional reprints may be ordered at the prices that the information on your IEEE Page Charges and Reprint
noted on the IEEE Page Charge and Reprint Order Form. Order Form and on this sheet be provided to your Purchasing
Department so that your P.O. is correct.
B. Mandatory and Overlength Page Charges Purchase Orders must include the following elements:
IEEE Policy 6.10 permits some types of periodicals to 1) Author’s Name
levy mandatory charges for each page in excess of a page 2) Paper Title
limit set by that publication. The charge itself is adjusted 3) Title of the IEEE Publication
each year to reflect costs. The purpose of this mandatory 4) Volume and Issue Number
charge is to encourage adherence to the publication’s budget 5) DOI Number (Digital Object Identifier).
and to provide funding for excess pages if an author has not Your Purchasing Department will find these elements clearly
been able to meet the stated length requirement. The same defined on your IEEE Page Charges and Reprint Order Form.
8
APPENDIX I
TABLE OF UNITS AND QUANTITY SYMBOLS
NOTE: Asterisks (*) indicate SI units, preferred multiples of SI units, or other units acceptable for use with SI.
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
3 ampere A amp, a SI unit of electric current. I
U
F
ampere-hour Ah amp-hr Also A 1 h.
3 A At SI unit of magnetomotive force. F
ampere (turn)
3 ampere per meter A/m SI unit of magnetic field A
strength. H
ångström Å Å Å4 10010 m.
Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE
Std 268-1992).
atmosphere, standard atm atm 4 101 325 Pa.
Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE
Std 268-1992).
atmosphere, technical at at 4 kgf/cm2 .
Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE
Std 268-1992).
3 atomic mass unit u The (unified) atomic mass unit
(unified) is defined as one-twelfth of the
mass of an atom of the
carbon-12 nuclide. Use of the
old atomic mass unit (amu),
defined by reference to oxygen,
is deprecated.
3 atto a SI prefix for 10018 .
3 attoampere aA
bar bar b, barye bar 4 100 kPa. Use of the bar
is strongly discouraged (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
Except for limited use in
meteorology.
barn b b 4 10028 m2 .
barrel bbl bbl = 42 galUS = 158.99 L.
This is the standard barrel used
for petroleum and petroleum
products. Different standard
barrels are used for other
commodities.
barrel per day bbl/d
baud Bd baud (w/prefix) In telecommunications, a unit of l/
signaling speed equal to one
element per second. The
signaling speed in bauds is equal
to the reciprocal of the signal
element length in seconds.
bel B b
3 Bq SI unit of activity of a
becquerel
radionuclide.
billion electronvolts GeV bev, BeV The name gigaelectronvolt is
preferred for this unit.
bit b In information theory, the bit is
a unit of information content
equal to the information content
of a message, the a priori
probability of which is one-half.
In computer science, the name
bit is used as a short form of
binary digit.
A1
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
meter
candle cd The unit of luminous intensity
has been given the name
candela. Use of the name candle
for this unit is deprecated.
3
centi c (prefix) SI prefix for 1002 .
3 centimeter cm
centipoise cP cP 4 1
mPa s. The name
centipoise is deprecated (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
centistokes cSt cSt 4 mm2 /s. The name
centistokes is deprecated (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
3 circular mil cmil 4 1
cmil (=4) 1006 in2 .
3 C c SI unit of electric charge. Q
coulomb
3
cubic centimeter cm3 cc Volume. (Preferred SI unit
multiple.)
cubic foot ft3
cubic foot per minute ft3 /min cfm
cubic foot per second ft3 /s
cubic inch in3
3 cubic meter
m3
3 cubic meter per
m3 /s
second
cubic yard yd3
curie Ci C Ci 4 3.7 x1010 Bq. A unit of
activity of a radionuclide. Use
of the SI unit, the becquerel, is
preferred.
cycle per second Hz c/s, cps, c/sec, See hertz.
cycle
darcy D D 4 1 1
cP (cm/s) (cm/atm) =
0.986923 m2 . A unit of
permeability of a porous
medium. By traditional
definition, a permeability of one
darcy will permit a flow of 1
cm3 /s of fluid of 1 cP viscosity
through an area of 1 cm2 under
a pressure gradient of 1 atm/cm.
Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE Std
268-1992).
day d day 4 24 h.
deci d (prefix) SI prefix for 1001 .
decibel dB db, DB
A2
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
A4
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
meter
3 lm/W SI unit of luminous efficacy.
lumen per watt K ()
,
1
K Kt
3 lumen second lm s SI unit of quantity of light. Q
3 lux lx 1x/lm 4 /m2 . SI unit of E
illuminance.
maxwell Mx The maxwell is the
electromagnetic CGS unit of
magnetic flux. Deprecated (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
3
mega M SI prefix for 106 . The prefix
mega shall not be used to mean
220 (that is, 1 048 576).
megabit per second Mb/s
3 megabyte
3 megaelectronvolt
MB MB 4 1 000 000 bytes.
MeV
3 MHz
megahertz
3 M M
megohm
3 m SI unit of length.
meter l
A6
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
3 pascal Pa Pa 4 N/m2 . SI unit of pressure
or stress.
3
3
pascal second Pa s 1 SI unit of dynamic viscosity.
peta P SI prefix for 1015 .
phot ph ph 4 lm/cm2 . CGS unit of
illuminance. Deprecated (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
3 pico p SI prefix for 10012 .
3 picofarad pF
3 pW
picowatt
pint pt pt (U.K.) = 0.568 26 L.
pt (U.S. dry) = 0.550 6 L.
pt (U.S. liquid) = 0.473 18 L.
poise P Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE Std
268-1992).
pound (avoirdupois) lb lb4 0.453 592 37 kg.
pound per cubic foot lb/ft3
pound-force lbf lbf = 4.4482 N.
pound-force foot lbf ft1
pound-force per square lbf/ft2
foot
pound-force per square lbf/in2 psi Although use of the abbreviation
inch psi is common, it should not be
used as a symbol.
poundal pdl pdl 4 1 lb ft/s2 = 0.1383 N
quart qt qt (U.K.) = 1.1365 L.
qt (U.S. dry) = 1.1012 L.
qt (U.S. liquid) = 0.946 35 L.
rad rd rd 4 0.01 Gy. A unit of
absorbed dose in the field of
radiation dosimetry. Use of the
SI unit, the gray, is preferred.
3 rad SI unit of plane angle.
radian
rem rem rem 4 0.01 Sv. A unit of dose
equivalent in the field of
radiation dosimetry. Use of the
SI unit, the sievert, is preferred.
1 rem = 0:01 Sv.
revolution per minute r/min Although use of rpm as an
abbreviation is common, it
should not be used as a symbol.
revolution per second r/s
roentgen R A unit of exposure in the field
of radiation dosimetry.
3 second (plane angle)
3
00
1
100 = 4:848 1006 rad.
second (time) s SI unit of time.
3
siemens S S 4 01
. SI unit of
conductance.
3 sievert Sv SI unit of dose equivalent in the
field of radiation dosimetry.
slug slug slug 4 1lbf s2 /ft = 14:594 kg.
square foot ft2
square inch in2
3
square meter m2
3
square meter per m2 /s SI unit of kinematic viscosity.
second
3
square millimeter per mm2 /s SI unit-multiple of kinematic
second viscosity.
square yard yd2
A7
Sometimes Quantity Symbol
Occurs as: (for use as
Unit Unit Symbol (do not use) Applications and Notes variables, etc.)
3 steradian sr SI unit of solid angle.
stilb sb sb 4 cd/cm2 . A CGS unit of
luminance. Deprecated (see
ANSI/IEEE Std 268-1992).
stokes St Deprecated (see ANSI/IEEE Std
268-1992).
3 tera T SI prefix for 1012 .
terabyte TB TB 4 1012 B.
3 tesla T T 4 1 4
N/(A m)2 Wb/m2 . SI
unit of magnetic flux density
(magnetic induction).
therm thm thm 4 100 000 Btu.
ton (short) ton ton 4 2000 lb.
ton, metric t t4 1000 kg. Use of the tonne
for this unit is deprecated in the
U.S. (see ANSI/IEEE Std
268-1992).
torr torr 1 torr = 1=760 = 1:333 = 102 1
Pa. Use not recommended
3 (unified) atomic mass u The (unified) atomic mass unit
unit is defined as one-twelfth of the
mass of an atom of the
carbon-12 nuclide. Use of the
old atomic mass unit (amu),
defined by reference to oxygen,
is deprecated.
3 var var IEC name and symbol for SI
unit of reactive power.
3 V SI unit of voltage.
volt
3 V/m SI unit of electric field strength.
volt per meter
3 VA va IEC name and symbol for SI
voltampere
unit of apparent power.
3 watt W SI unit of power.
A8
APPENDIX II
SOME COMMON ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
NOTE: Asterisks (*) indicate terms which must be defined the first time they are used in text. Other terms listed
here may be used without definition.
ac alternating current
A–D, A/D analog-to-digital
AF audio frequency*
AFC automatic frequency control*
AGC automatic gain control*
AM amplitude modulation
APD avalanche photodiode
AR antireflection*
ARMA autoregressive moving average*
ASIC application-specified integrated circuit*
ASK amplitude shift keying
ATM asynchronous transfer mode
av average (subscript)*
avg average (function)
AWGN additive white Gaussian noise*
dc direct current
DC directional coupler
DF direction finder*; deuterium fluoride; degree of freedom*
DFT discrete Fourier transform*
DMA direct memory access*
DPCM differential pulse code modulation*
DPSK differential phase-shift keying*
NA numerical aperture*
NIR near infrared response*
NMR nuclear magnetic resonance*
n-p-n (diode)
NRZ nonreturn to zero*
OD outside diameter
OEIC optoelectronic integrated circuit*
OOP object-oriented programming
A12
APPENDIX III
LIST OF IEEE TRANSACTIONS, JOURNALS, AND LETTERS
A13
Publication Acronym Reference Abbreviation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES ED IEEE Trans. Electron Devices
IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS EDL IEEE Electron Device Lett.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRONICS PACKAGING EPM IEEE Trans. Electron. Packag. Manufact.
MANUFACTURING
CPMTC* IEEE Trans. Comp., Packag., Manufact.
Technol. C* (1996–1998)
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ENERGY CONVERSION EC IEEE Trans. Energy Conversion
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT EM IEEE Trans. Eng. Manage.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION EVC IEEE Trans. Evol. Comput.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON FUZZY SYSTEMS FUZZ IEEE Trans. Fuzzy Syst.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE GRS IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sensing
SENSING
GE* IEEE Trans. Geosci. Electron.*
(1962–1979)
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING IP IEEE Trans. Image Processing
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS IE IEEE Trans. Ind. Electron.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS IA IEEE Trans. Ind. Applicat.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ITB IEEE Trans. Inform. Technol. Biomed.
IN BIOMEDICINE
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY IT IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INSTRUMENTATION AND IM IEEE Trans. Instrum. Meas.
MEASUREMENT
I, PGI* IEEE Trans. Instrum.*
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION ITS IEEE Trans. Intell. Transport. Syst.
SYSTEMS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON KNOWLEDGE AND DATA KDE IEEE Trans. Knowledge Data Eng.
ENGINEERING
JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY LT J. Lightwave Technol.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MAGNETICS MAG IEEE Trans. Magn.
IEEE/ASME TRANSACTIONS ON MECHATRONICS MECH IEEE/ASME Trans. Mechatron.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING MI IEEE Trans. Med. Imag.
JOURNAL OF MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS MEMS J. Microelectromech. Syst.
IEEE MICROWAVE AND GUIDED WAVE LETTERS MGWL IEEE Microwave Guided Wave Lett.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MICROWAVE THEORY AND MTT IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech.
TECHNIQUES
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA MM IEEE Trans. Multimedia
IEEE/ACM TRANSACTIONS ON NETWORKING NET IEEE/ACM Trans. Networking
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL NETWORKS NN IEEE Trans. Neural Networks
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE NS IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci.
IEEE JOURNAL OF OCEANIC ENGINEERING OE IEEE J. Oceanic Eng.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PARALLEL AND DISTRIBUTED PDS IEEE Trans. Parallel Distrib. Syst.
SYSTEMS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND PAMI IEEE Trans. Pattern Anal. Machine Intell.
MACHINE INTELLIGENCE
IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS PTL IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PLASMA SCIENCE PS IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER APPARATUS AND SYSTEMS PAS* IEEE Trans. Power App. Syst.*
(through 1985)
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER DELIVERY PWRD IEEE Trans. Power Delivery
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS PEL IEEE Trans. Power Electron.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER SYSTEMS PWRS IEEE Trans. Power Syst.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION PC IEEE Trans. Prof. Commun.
IEEE JOURNAL OF QUANTUM ELECTRONICS QE IEEE J. Quantum Electron.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON REHABILITATION ENGINEERING RE IEEE Trans. Rehab. Eng.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON RELIABILITY R IEEE Trans. Rel.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION RA IEEE Trans. Robot. Automat.
RA* IEEE J. Robot. Automat.* (1985–1988)
IEEE JOURNAL ON SELECTED AREAS IN COMMUNICATIONS SAC IEEE J. Select. Areas Commun.
IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM STQE IEEE J. Select. Topics Quantum Electron.
ELECTRONICS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SEMICONDUCTOR MANUFACTURING SM IEEE Trans. Semiconduct. Manufact.
A14
Publication Acronym Reference Abbreviation
IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL IEEE Sensors J.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING SP IEEE Trans. Signal Processing
ASSP* IEEE Trans. Acoust., Speech, Signal
Processing* (1975–1990)
AU* IEEE Trans. Audio Electroacoust.*
(until 1974)
IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING LETTERS SPL IEEE Signal Processing Lett.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING SE IEEE Trans. Software Eng.
IEEE JOURNAL OF SOLID-STATE CIRCUITS SSC IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SPEECH AND AUDIO PROCESSING SAP IEEE Trans. Speech Audio Processing
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS, MAN, AND SMCA IEEE Trans. Syst., Man, Cybern. A
CYBERNETICS—PART A: SYSTEMS AND HUMANS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS, MAN, AND SMCB IEEE Trans. Syst., Man, Cybern. B
CYBERNETICS—PART B: CYBERNETICS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS, MAN, AND SMCC IEEE Trans. Syst., Man, Cybern. C
CYBERNETICS—PART C: APPLICATIONS AND REVIEWS
SMC* IEEE Trans. Syst., Man, Cybern.*
(1971–1995)
SSC* IEEE Trans. Syst. Sci. Cybernetics*
(through 1970)
IEEE TRANSLATION JOURNAL ON MAGNETICS IN JAPAN TJMJ IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Jpn.
MMS* IEEE Trans. Man-Mach. Syst.*
(through 1970)
HFE* Hum. Factors Electron.* (through 1968)
IEEE JOURNAL ON TECHNOLOGY IN COMPUTER JTCAD IEEE J. Technol. Computer Aided Design
AIDED DESIGN
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ULTRASONICS, FERROELECTRICS, UFFC IEEE Trans. Ultrason., Ferroelect.,
AND FREQUENCY CONTROL Freq. Contr.
SU* IEEE Trans. Sonics Ultrason.*
(through 1985)
UE* IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Eng.*
PGUE* IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Eng.*
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VEHICULAR TECHNOLOGY VT IEEE Trans. Veh. Technol.
VC* IEEE Trans. Veh. Commun.*
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VERY LARGE SCALE INTEGRATION VLSI IEEE Trans. VLSI Syst.
(VLSI) SYSTEMS
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND VCG IEEE Trans. Visual. Comput. Graphics
COMPUTER GRAPHICS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE Proc. IEEE
Proc. IRE* (through 1962)
A15
APPENDIX IV
LIST OF IEEE MAGAZINES
A16