Generated by GPT-5-mini| IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine | |
|---|---|
| Title | IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine |
| Discipline | Antenna engineering; Electromagnetics; Radio propagation |
| Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
| Country | United States |
| History | 1959–present |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine is a quarterly publication from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers that focuses on antenna design, electromagnetic theory, and radio propagation. The magazine serves a diverse audience including researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, engineers at Bell Labs, regulators at the Federal Communications Commission, and practitioners at companies such as Qualcomm, Nokia, and Ericsson. Contributors have included academics affiliated with Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, University of Michigan, and laboratories like Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories.
The magazine originated amid postwar advances in microwave research at institutions including RCA Laboratories, Harvard University, Princeton University, and Columbia University. Early influence came from figures associated with Hugh Dowding-era radar development and pioneers from Bell Telephone Laboratories and Tudor Humphries-led projects at Cambridge University and Imperial College London. During the Cold War period, collaborations linked researchers at NASA, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Argonne National Laboratory, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory with universities such as Cornell University and Yale University. The journal evolved alongside milestones like the Sputnik launch, the Apollo program, and the expansion of cellular standards developed by groups at Motorola and AT&T. Later decades saw contributions from researchers at ETH Zurich, Technical University of Munich, Tsinghua University, and Kyoto University as antenna technology expanded into satellite systems by Intelsat, phased arrays at Raytheon, and mobile communications at Samsung.
The magazine covers applied topics spanning antenna theory tested at facilities like Arecibo Observatory and Jodrell Bank Observatory, computational electromagnetics advanced at National Institute of Standards and Technology, and propagation studies performed in environments studied by Los Alamos National Laboratory and DARPA. It publishes tutorials suitable for engineers at companies such as Huawei, Cisco Systems, and Apple Inc., alongside reviews of research from laboratories at Bell Labs, IBM Research, and Microsoft Research. Topics intersect with standards and regulatory activities of 3GPP, International Telecommunication Union, and European Telecommunications Standards Institute, and with space missions by European Space Agency, SpaceX, and NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Editorial leadership has included eminent scholars from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign as editors coordinating peer review drawing on referees from Princeton University, Caltech, and Johns Hopkins University. The board manages submissions using workflows similar to those at Nature Publishing Group and IEEE Xplore, relying on peer reviewers affiliated with University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, University of Oxford, and industrial labs like Siemens and Thales Group. Special issues are assembled by guest editors from Delft University of Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, and Peking University. Ethical oversight references policies adopted across organizations such as Committee on Publication Ethics, with editorial standards comparable to Proceedings of the IEEE and IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation.
The magazine is indexed in major databases used by researchers at Clarivate Analytics and librarians at Library of Congress, and cited by authors at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, and CERN. Its articles contribute to citation networks involving journals like IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation, and Radio Science. Impact measures are tracked alongside metrics reported by Scopus, Web of Science, and services used by institutions such as California Institute of Technology and University of Toronto. Library holdings extend to collections at British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and National Diet Library.
The magazine has published retrospectives and tutorials referencing landmark work by individuals and groups associated with Ronald Bracewell, John Kraus, Robert Harrington, and teams at Bell Labs and MIT Lincoln Laboratory. Special issues have focused on advances tied to projects at European Space Agency, NASA, CERN, and programs led by DARPA and National Science Foundation. Noteworthy tutorials and reviews discuss technologies central to developments by Qualcomm, Intel Corporation, Samsung, and Broadcom Corporation and analyses influenced by methods from Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories.
The magazine is distributed to members of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and accessible via platforms used by subscribers at IEEE Xplore and institutional consortia including JSTOR and ProQuest. Libraries at University of California, University of Cambridge, Harvard University, and University of Oxford provide print and electronic access, while authors from Tsinghua University, Seoul National University, and Indian Institute of Science contribute under copyright arrangements managed by the IEEE Publication Services and Products Board. International distribution reaches readers affiliated with companies such as Nokia, Ericsson, Huawei, and research centers at Fraunhofer Society and Max Planck Society.
Category:IEEE publications