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| Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan |
| Discipline | Mathematics |
| Publisher | Mathematical Society of Japan |
| Country | Japan |
| Established | 1949 |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
| Issn | 0025-5645 |
Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal published by the Mathematical Society of Japan that presents research articles in pure and applied mathematics. Established in the aftermath of World War II, the journal has published works by mathematicians associated with institutions such as the University of Tokyo, Kyoto University, Osaka University, Tohoku University, and international centers like Princeton University, Harvard University, École Normale Supérieure, and the Institute for Advanced Study.
The journal was founded in 1949 during reconstruction efforts linked to the postwar period and the influence of figures associated with Hiroshima University, Kyoto University, University of Tokyo Faculty of Science, Osaka Imperial University, and scholars who studied under mentors from Élie Cartan, Hermann Weyl, Emmy Noether, and visitors from Princeton and Cambridge University. Early editorial leadership included mathematicians connected to the Japan Academy and alumni of University of Cambridge, University of Göttingen, University of Paris, and University of Bonn. Over decades the journal intersected with research movements around the Atiyah–Singer Index Theorem, Langlands Program, Galois Theory, Algebraic Geometry, Riemann Hypothesis discussions, and developments linked to collaborators from Institute of Mathematical Sciences (India), Steklov Institute of Mathematics, and Max Planck Society research groups.
The journal covers research articles in areas historically emphasized at Japanese centers, including topics related to Algebraic Topology, Differential Geometry, Partial Differential Equations, Functional Analysis, Number Theory, Algebraic Geometry, Probability Theory, Dynamical Systems, and connections to applied problems addressed at institutions such as Riken, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, and interdisciplinary projects linked to Keio University and Waseda University. Contributors frequently work on subjects that interact with frameworks by Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, John Milnor, Michael Atiyah, Shing-Tung Yau, Edward Witten, Paul Erdős, Kurt Gödel, André Weil, and methods informed by research from Courant Institute, IMS (Institute of Mathematical Statistics), and SIAM communities.
The editorial board is composed of researchers affiliated with universities such as University of Tokyo, Kyoto University, Nagoya University, Hokkaido University, Keio University, and international scholars from Princeton University, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, École Polytechnique, and the University of Chicago. Peer review follows standards modeled on practices from journals like Annals of Mathematics, Acta Mathematica, Inventiones Mathematicae, and Transactions of the American Mathematical Society with anonymous refereeing by experts who have held positions at Institute for Advanced Study, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, and national academies such as the Royal Society and the National Academy of Sciences.
Published bimonthly by the Mathematical Society of Japan, the journal is distributed to libraries at major institutions including University of Tokyo Library, National Diet Library (Japan), British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and archival collections at Cornell University and University of California, Berkeley. Print and digital access align with cataloging practices of organizations like JSTOR, MathSciNet, Zentralblatt MATH, and indexing by services associated with the American Mathematical Society and the International Mathematical Union.
The journal has been cited in work from researchers in schools such as Kyoto School of Mathematics and has influenced developments referenced by laureates associated with Fields Medal, Abel Prize, Wolf Prize, Chern Medal, and recipients of national honors from the Japan Prize and the Order of Culture. It is recognized within citation analyses carried out by entities like Clarivate Analytics, Scopus, and university ranking assessments that track outputs from institutions including University of Tokyo, Keio University, Nagoya University, and international centers such as Princeton University and Harvard University.
Notable contributors have included mathematicians linked to major schools and results: researchers influenced by Hiroshi Yamabe, Kunihiko Kodaira, Kiyoshi Itō, Shizuo Kakutani, Goro Shimura, Heisuke Hironaka, Takurō Mochizuki, Takeshi Saito, Katsumi Nomizu, Masaki Kashiwara, Hiroshi Umemura, Kiyoshi Oka, and collaborators with ties to André Weil, Jean-Pierre Serre, Alexander Grothendieck, John Tate, Serge Lang, and Harold Stark. Landmark articles published in the journal have contributed to progress in topics analogous to breakthroughs reported in venues such as Annals of Mathematics, Inventiones Mathematicae, and Journal of the American Mathematical Society and have been discussed at conferences hosted by International Congress of Mathematicians, Symposium on Algebraic Geometry, Workshop on Partial Differential Equations, and gatherings sponsored by the Mathematical Society of Japan.
Category:Mathematics journals Category:Academic journals established in 1949 Category:Mathematical Society of Japan