Generated by GPT-5-mini| Annales Polonici Mathematici | |
|---|---|
| Title | Annales Polonici Mathematici |
| Discipline | Mathematics |
| Language | English, Polish |
| Publisher | Polish Academy of Sciences |
| Country | Poland |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| Firstdate | 1920s |
| Issn | 0000-0000 |
Annales Polonici Mathematici is a scholarly mathematics journal published under the auspices of the Polish Academy of Sciences and associated institutions in Warsaw, Kraków, and Poznań, presenting research in pure and applied mathematics. The journal has appeared alongside publications from institutions such as the University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University, and Adam Mickiewicz University, and has engaged contributors connected to centers like the Stefan Banach International Mathematical Center, the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, and the International Congress of Mathematicians. Over its history the title has intersected with figures and organizations including Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus, David Hilbert, Emmy Noether, Norbert Wiener, and others active in European mathematical networks.
The journal traces roots to interwar Polish mathematical activity centered in Lviv, Warsaw, and Kraków, where mathematicians such as Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus, and Wacław Sierpiński fostered locales like the Lwów School of Mathematics and institutions like the Polish Mathematical Society and the Jagiellonian University. During the postwar reconstruction period the journal developed alongside the Polish Academy of Sciences and research groups connected to the University of Warsaw, Adam Mickiewicz University, and the Nicolaus Copernicus University, paralleling programs supported by the European Mathematical Society, the International Mathematical Union, and national academies in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom. Throughout Cold War eras the title interacted with trends from Göttingen, Moscow, and Cambridge and was influenced by exchanges involving Hilbert, Emmy Noether, Élie Cartan, Jacques Hadamard, and John von Neumann, while later decades saw connections to contemporary centers such as ETH Zurich, Princeton University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Stanford University.
The journal publishes original research articles in areas including algebra, analysis, topology, differential equations, number theory, functional analysis, probability theory, mathematical physics, and computational mathematics, reflecting methods associated with figures like Banach, Sierpiński, Kolmogorov, Hilbert, and Noether. Topics frequently reference techniques and traditions from work by Évariste Galois, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Leonhard Euler, Pierre-Simon Laplace, Joseph Fourier, Sofia Kovalevskaya, Andrey Kolmogorov, Paul Erdős, Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, Michael Atiyah, and Isadore Singer. The editorial remit embraces rigorous proofs, structural results, and connections to problems discussed at venues such as the International Congress of Mathematicians, the Abel Prize ceremonies, the Fields Medal announcements, and meetings organized by the European Research Council and NATO Science Committee.
Editorial oversight has often included professors affiliated with the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University, Adam Mickiewicz University, and Warsaw University of Technology, with peer review processes comparable to those used by journals like Acta Mathematica, Annals of Mathematics, Inventiones Mathematicae, and Journal of the American Mathematical Society. The journal operates within publishing frameworks used by the Polish Academy of Sciences, national research councils, and university presses, and its governance reflects practices seen at the Royal Society, the National Academy of Sciences, the Max Planck Society, and the Sorbonne. Editors and advisers have hailed from academic departments linked to the Collège de France, Humboldt University of Berlin, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, University of Cambridge, and Yale University, collaborating with indexing services and library consortia in Europe and North America.
Noteworthy contributions have included influential papers touching on problems and methods associated with Banach spaces, Sierpiński sets, Hilbert spaces, Riemann surfaces, modular forms, elliptic curves, and spectral theory, connecting to work by Bernhard Riemann, André Weil, Srinivasa Ramanujan, G. H. Hardy, John Nash, Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, and Yuri Manin. Published articles have addressed conjectures and theorems related to Fermat, Riemann, Goldbach, Hilbert, and Poincaré traditions, and have influenced developments in representation theory, algebraic geometry, analytic number theory, and mathematical physics with ties to the work of Emmy Noether, Hermann Weyl, Roger Penrose, Edward Witten, and Freeman Dyson. Special issues and survey articles have highlighted proceedings and lectures from conferences attended by delegates from institutions like Princeton University, Harvard University, University of Chicago, Columbia University, CERN, CNRS, and the Institute for Advanced Study.
The journal is indexed in major bibliographic services and citation databases similar to Mathematical Reviews, Zentralblatt MATH, Scopus, Web of Science, and the Directory of Open Access Journals, and its articles are discoverable through library catalogs at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, British Library, Library of Congress, and university libraries at Oxford, Cambridge, Heidelberg, and Warsaw. Citation networks show links to publications in Annals of Mathematics, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, and Communications in Mathematical Physics, and authors have received recognition through prizes and fellowships like the Fields Medal, Abel Prize, Wolf Prize, EMS Prizes, and national honors from the Polish Academy of Sciences, Royal Society, Academia Europaea, and the National Science Foundation.
Current and archival issues are available through publication channels managed by the Polish Academy of Sciences, university libraries in Warsaw, Kraków, and Poznań, and international aggregators used by institutions such as JSTOR, Project Euclid, Elsevier, Springer, and academic consortia at the European University Institute, University of Bologna, and University of Milan. Subscriptions, open access options, and author guidelines follow policies comparable to those of major publishers and research funders including the European Research Council, Horizon Europe, and national research councils across Poland, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Libraries, researchers, and students access content via interlibrary loan networks, institutional repositories at Jagiellonian University and University of Warsaw, and indexing at Mathematical Reviews and Zentralblatt MATH.
Category:Mathematics journals