Generated by GPT-5-mini| Annales Henri Poincaré | |
|---|---|
| Title | Annales Henri Poincaré |
| Discipline | Mathematical physics |
| Abbreviation | Ann. Henri Poincaré |
| Publisher | Springer Science+Business Media |
| Country | France |
| History | 2000–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 1424-0661 |
Annales Henri Poincaré Annales Henri Poincaré is a peer-reviewed scientific journal founded in 2000 that publishes research at the intersection of Henri Poincaré, Mathematical Physics, Joseph Fourier, Pierre-Simon Laplace, and modern theoretical frameworks such as Quantum Field Theory, Statistical Mechanics, General Relativity, Partial Differential Equation, and Dynamical Systems. The journal has published articles by contributors associated with institutions such as École Normale Supérieure, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Princeton University, and has been indexed alongside titles like Communications in Mathematical Physics, Journal of Mathematical Physics, Letters in Mathematical Physics, Physical Review Letters, and Annals of Mathematics.
The journal was established in 2000 during a period of expansion in specialized titles following initiatives by European publishers including Springer Science+Business Media and collaborations connecting research centers such as Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Société Française de Physique. Founding editorial influences trace to figures and schools linked with Henri Poincaré traditions and the mathematical lineage of David Hilbert, Élie Cartan, Sofia Kovalevskaya, Évariste Galois, and later contributors from groups associated with André Lichnerowicz, Jean Leray, Alexander Grothendieck, and John von Neumann. Over subsequent decades the title has paralleled developments associated with conferences like Strings Conference, International Congress of Mathematicians, Les Houches Summer School, Solvay Conference, and collaborations involving CERN, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, and Max Planck Institute for Mathematics.
The journal's remit encompasses rigorous contributions in areas historically linked to Henri Poincaré and allied traditions, including deep work on Quantum Electrodynamics, Yang–Mills theory, Einstein field equations, Navier–Stokes equations, KAM theory, and operator-theoretic advances inspired by John von Neumann and Paul Dirac. It aims to serve communities around departments and laboratories such as Laboratoire de Physique Théorique, Department of Mathematics, Princeton University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge University Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, and institutes like Steklov Institute of Mathematics and Imperial College London. The editorial mission emphasizes rigorous analysis bridging methods from schools linked to André Weil, Henri Lebesgue, Ludwig Boltzmann, S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan, and Michael Atiyah.
The editorial board has historically included scholars appointed from bodies such as Collège de France, École Polytechnique, University of California, Berkeley, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Princeton University, Yale University, and ETH Zurich. Editorial policies align with standards promoted by organizations like International Mathematical Union, European Mathematical Society, American Mathematical Society, and Institute of Physics. Published by Springer Science+Business Media on a monthly schedule, the journal uses peer review processes common to titles coexisting with Journal of Functional Analysis, Inventiones Mathematicae, Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
Annales Henri Poincaré is abstracted and indexed in services including Science Citation Index Expanded, Scopus, MathSciNet, Zentralblatt MATH, INSPIRE-HEP, and Web of Science, appearing in bibliographic listings alongside journals such as Physical Review D, Classical and Quantum Gravity, Journal of Statistical Physics, SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis, and Acta Mathematica. The journal's metrics are tracked by agencies such as Clarivate Analytics and analytics platforms maintained by Elsevier and Google Scholar.
The journal has published influential papers touching on breakthroughs comparable in scope to works by Roger Penrose, Stephen Hawking, Edward Witten, Mikhail Gromov, Cédric Villani, and Terence Tao in related domains, including rigorous results on scattering theory reminiscent of studies by Enrico Fermi and Lev Landau, renormalization group analyses in the lineage of Kenneth G. Wilson, and spectral theory developments linked to John von Neumann and Israel Gelfand. Specific contributions have advanced understanding of problems connected to Boltzmann equation, Klein–Gordon equation, Dirac equation, Ising model, and Bose–Einstein condensate theory, attracting citations from researchers at Princeton University, Harvard University, University of California, Berkeley, MPI for Physics, and CERN collaborations.
The journal is regarded within communities associated with mathematical physics as a leading venue comparable to Communications in Mathematical Physics and Letters in Mathematical Physics for rigorous work, and it features prominently in citation analyses by Clarivate Analytics and Scopus. Its influence appears in curricula and research programs at institutions like École Normale Supérieure, Princeton University, University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, and Yale University, and it is frequently cited in monographs alongside texts by Michael Reed, Barry Simon, Lars Hörmander, Lawrence C. Evans, and Vladimir Arnold. The reception among scholars tied to traditions from Henri Poincaré to contemporary figures such as Alain Connes and Benoît Mandelbrot reflects its role in bridging mathematical rigor with theoretical physics inquiry.
Category:Mathematical physics journals