Generated by GPT-5-mini| IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | |
|---|---|
| Title | IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation |
| Discipline | Electrical engineering |
| Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| History | 1952–present |
| Issn | 0018-926X |
IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers that covers research in antenna theory, electromagnetic propagation, and related technologies. The journal publishes original research, reviews, and letters that are widely cited across academic institutions and industry laboratories, and it is recognized by many professional societies and technical committees for shaping practice and standards. Authors and readers include faculty from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, researchers from Bell Labs, engineers at Northrop Grumman, and members of international organizations such as NATO, European Space Agency, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
The journal traces its roots to early postwar developments in radio and radar, emerging contemporaneously with institutions like Bell Telephone Laboratories, Harvard University, and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and later formalized under the aegis of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers following amalgamations involving the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers. Early landmark contributions paralleled projects at MIT Radiation Laboratory, collaborations with researchers at California Institute of Technology, and technological demands from programs such as Project RAND and initiatives within Brookhaven National Laboratory. Over decades the publication documented advances tied to events and technologies including the Sputnik crisis, the Apollo program, the Global Positioning System, the development of standards by International Telecommunication Union, and research funded by agencies like the National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Editorial stewardship has included editors affiliated with Princeton University, Yale University, University of Cambridge, Delft University of Technology, and Tsinghua University.
The journal's scope spans antenna design and analysis, electromagnetic theory, propagation phenomena, and measurement techniques relevant to sectors represented by NASA, European Organization for Nuclear Research, and corporations such as Raytheon Technologies and Thales Group. Topics include computational electromagnetics used in projects at Argonne National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory, metamaterials researched at Imperial College London and University of Toronto, phased array systems developed for programs at Boeing and Airbus, radio-frequency identification innovations linked to work at Siemens, and wireless communications research involving teams from Ericsson, Nokia, and Huawei. The journal also covers propagation studies informed by field campaigns in regions like Svalbard, experiments aboard platforms such as International Space Station, and urban channel modeling tied to initiatives in Singapore and Seoul.
The editorial board traditionally comprises scholars and engineers affiliated with institutions like Columbia University, University of Michigan, University of Oxford, National University of Singapore, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and national laboratories including Sandia National Laboratories. Peer review follows standards practiced by professional journals used by members of American Physical Society and Royal Society, involving associate editors and reviewers from universities such as Carnegie Mellon University, University of Texas at Austin, Purdue University, and Georgia Institute of Technology. The manuscript workflow leverages digital submission systems similar to those adopted by Nature Communications and Science Advances, while ethical oversight aligns with guidelines promoted by organizations like Committee on Publication Ethics. Special issues have been guest-edited by researchers from ETH Zurich, RWTH Aachen University, Seoul National University, and University of Sydney.
The journal is indexed in major databases and citation services utilized by researchers at Clarivate, Scopus, and institutions subscribing to resources from ProQuest and EBSCO. Abstracting services used by scholars at University of California system libraries and corporate R&D groups include listings in INSPEC, Compendex, and entries within Google Scholar. Libraries at Oxford University, Cambridge University, and the Library of Congress catalogue the journal, and metrics are tracked in platforms such as Journal Citation Reports and by analytics teams in organizations like Elsevier.
Papers published in the journal have influenced standards, products, and research agendas at entities including 3M, Qualcomm, Intel, and defense contractors like BAE Systems; they underpin technologies used in projects led by European Commission consortia and industrial research centers at Bell Labs Research. The journal's impact factor and citation counts are referenced in promotion cases at universities such as Cornell University and Johns Hopkins University and inform grant reviews by agencies including the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the National Institutes of Health when interdisciplinary work intersects. Recognition for influential papers has come in forms analogous to awards offered by IEEE, Royal Academy of Engineering, and national science academies in countries like France and Germany.
Notable contributions published in the journal have included foundational work in antenna array theory cited alongside classic texts from IEEE Standard, developments in computational methods paralleling advances from Alan Turing-era computing centers and later work associated with processors from Intel Corporation, breakthroughs in metamaterials that connect to research at College de France and Max Planck Society, and propagation measurements underpinning services by T-Mobile and Vodafone. Seminal papers influenced the design of systems used by National Aeronautics and Space Administration missions, terrestrial networks deployed by Sprint Corporation, and radar technologies referenced in programs at Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics. The journal continues to publish work by researchers affiliated with University of California, Los Angeles, McGill University, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Technische Universität München, and University of Melbourne.
Category:IEEE journals Category:Electrical engineering journals Category:Academic journals established in 1952