Generated by GPT-5-mini| Annales de la Société Polonaise de Mathématique | |
|---|---|
| Title | Annales de la Société Polonaise de Mathématique |
| Discipline | Mathematics |
| Language | French, Polish, English |
| Publisher | Société Polonaise de Mathématique |
| Country | Poland |
| History | 1920–present |
| Frequency | Annual/Irregular |
Annales de la Société Polonaise de Mathématique is a scholarly periodical published by the Société Polonaise de Mathématique that presents research in pure and applied mathematics, with emphasis on analysis, algebra, geometry, and mathematical physics. The journal has been associated with major European and international institutions and figures, and it serves as a venue connecting work from Polish mathematical schools with developments in France, Germany, Russia, and the United Kingdom. Over decades the publication has featured contributions by mathematicians affiliated with University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University, Polish Academy of Sciences, CNRS, École Normale Supérieure, and Princeton University.
The journal was founded in the aftermath of World War I amid a resurgence of Polish academic institutions, paralleling the reconstitution of Second Polish Republic cultural life and scientific societies such as Polish Mathematical Society and Union of Polish Universities. Early editors and contributors included members of the Kraków and Warsaw schools who corresponded with contemporaries at University of Göttingen, University of Cambridge, University of Paris, and Moscow State University. During the interwar period the periodical published work linked to figures associated with Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus, Stanisław Ulam, and Kazimierz Kuratowski, while after World War II it navigated the institutional changes under Polish People's Republic research bodies and collaborated with the Polish Academy of Sciences. Cold War interactions brought exchanges with scholars at Harvard University, University of California, Berkeley, Moscow Mathematical Society, and Akademgorodok, culminating in special issues that showcased cross-border developments in Functional analysis, Topology, and Probability theory. In the post-1990 era the journal expanded ties to European Mathematical Society, International Mathematical Union, Institut Henri Poincaré, and global research networks.
The journal's remit spans classical and contemporary topics, publishing original articles, survey papers, and occasional translated expositions reflecting work from institutions like Steklov Institute of Mathematics, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, Institute of Advanced Study, and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. Typical subjects include research connected to legacies of Aleksandr Lyapunov, David Hilbert, Élie Cartan, and André Weil as well as modern threads influenced by Paul Erdős, John von Neumann, and Michel Demazure. Regularly covered areas feature research relevant to Real analysis, Complex analysis, Algebraic geometry, Differential geometry, Operator theory, Mathematical logic, and Number theory, with occasional contributions linked to applied venues such as Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences collaborations with European Organization for Nuclear Research, NASA, and Siemens research groups.
Editorial oversight has historically involved prominent scholars from Jagiellonian University, University of Warsaw, Wrocław University of Science and Technology, and international partners at University of Cambridge, ETH Zurich, and École Polytechnique. Peer review standards align with practices endorsed by International Mathematical Union and Committee on Publication Ethics, employing external referees drawn from lists including faculty from Princeton University, Stanford University, Imperial College London, and University of Tokyo. The journal accepts submissions in French, Polish, and English and publishes under the imprint of the Société Polonaise de Mathématique with an editorial board that has historically included holders of honors such as the Order of Polonia Restituta, the Abel Prize, and membership in the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences. Special issues and conference proceedings reflect collaborations with events like the International Congress of Mathematicians, the European Congress of Mathematics, and symposia hosted by Banach Center.
Noteworthy contributions have come from mathematicians associated with Stefan Banach's functional analysis school, researchers influenced by Stanisław Mazur, and later authors connected to Witold Hurewicz, Andrzej Mostowski, Jerzy Neyman, and Kazimierz Kuratowski. Influential articles addressed problems related to theorems bearing names associated with Banach–Tarski paradox, Kuratowski closure-complement problem, and methods linked to Sobolev spaces. The journal published work that interacted with research by Paul Cohen, Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, Enrico Bombieri, John Milnor, and Michael Atiyah, often drawing citations across the databases curated by Mathematical Reviews and Zentralblatt MATH. Special commemorative issues honored legacies of Marian Rejewski-adjacent cryptologic mathematics and historical reflections on mathematics education reforms involving figures from Lwów School of Mathematics and Kraków School of Mathematics.
The periodical is indexed in major bibliographic services alongside journals from Springer Science+Business Media, Elsevier, and Cambridge University Press, and it features in catalogues maintained by WorldCat, Library of Congress, and national libraries such as Biblioteka Narodowa. Citation impact measures relate to networks tracked by Web of Science, Scopus, and MathSciNet, and its articles have been cited in works published by authors affiliated with University of Oxford, Yale University, Columbia University, Moscow State University, and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. Its scholarly influence is reflected in collaborations with mathematical institutes including Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques and Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics.
Back issues are held in research libraries at University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University, Polish Academy of Sciences Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and major university repositories such as Harvard Library and Bodleian Libraries. Distribution channels have included print subscriptions, interlibrary loan agreements with European Mathematical Society Publishing House, and digital archives accessible via institutional consortia involving Project Euclid-like services and national digitization initiatives of Poland. Recent editorial policies have favored open-access options for selected articles in coordination with funding agencies like European Research Council and national grant programs administered by National Science Centre (Poland).
Category:Mathematics journals