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Mathematical Proceedings of the Polish Academy of Sciences

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Mathematical Proceedings of the Polish Academy of Sciences
TitleMathematical Proceedings of the Polish Academy of Sciences
DisciplineMathematics
PublisherPolish Academy of Sciences
CountryPoland
History1959–present
FrequencyQuarterly

Mathematical Proceedings of the Polish Academy of Sciences is a peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing research in mathematics and related fields. The journal issues papers by authors affiliated with institutions such as the Polish Academy of Sciences, University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, and international centres like Princeton University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, École Normale Supérieure, and University of Cambridge. It has hosted contributions from mathematicians connected to events such as the International Congress of Mathematicians, prizes including the Fields Medal, the Abel Prize, and organizations like the European Mathematical Society and the American Mathematical Society.

History

The periodical traces roots to post-war Polish scientific reorganization under the Polish Academy of Sciences and reforms contemporaneous with figures like Tadeusz Banachiewicz and institutions such as the Stefan Banach Center and the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Its establishment in the late 1950s parallels activities at the University of Warsaw and exchanges with mathematicians from the Courant Institute, Moscow State University, Heidelberg University, University of Paris, and University of Cambridge. Over decades the journal intersected with developments influenced by the work of Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus, Kazimierz Kuratowski, Wacław Sierpiński, and international visitors including Paul Erdős, John von Neumann, André Weil, Alexander Grothendieck, and David Hilbert.

Scope and Editorial Focus

The journal emphasizes research articles in areas frequented by contributors from institutes such as the Institute for Advanced Study, Collège de France, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and departments at University of Oxford and ETH Zurich. Typical subjects align with themes represented by prizes and conferences — for example, analytic topics linked to work of Bernhard Riemann, algebraic theories connected to Emmy Noether, topological problems influenced by Henri Poincaré, and probabilistic studies following traditions of Andrey Kolmogorov and Kolmogorov's zero–one law contexts. Editorial selection often references methodologies associated with researchers like John Nash, Claude Shannon, Sophus Lie, Évariste Galois, and approaches seen in publications from Springer Science+Business Media and Elsevier journals.

Publication Details

Issues are released on a quarterly schedule under the auspices of the Polish Academy of Sciences with contributions submitted from scholars at universities such as Jagiellonian University, AGH University of Science and Technology, Wrocław University of Science and Technology, Charles University, KU Leuven, and research centres like the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences and the Steklov Institute of Mathematics. The editorial process involves peer review drawing referees from networks including the European Mathematical Society, the American Mathematical Society, the International Mathematical Union, and national academies like the Royal Society and the National Academy of Sciences (United States). Production and distribution have paralleled practices at publishers such as Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press in presentation and indexing.

Abstracting and Indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed by major services analogous to Mathematical Reviews, Zentralblatt MATH, Scopus, and databases curated by entities like Clarivate Analytics and organisations akin to CrossRef. Its metadata are discoverable through aggregators used by libraries at institutions such as Harvard University, Yale University, University of California, Berkeley, National Library of Poland, and international consortia including Project Euclid and repositories linked to the Digital Repository of the Polish Academy of Sciences.

Impact and Reception

The publication has influenced areas pursued by laureates of the Fields Medal, by authors affiliated with centres such as the Institute for Advanced Study and the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and by teams associated with problems memorialized in works like Hilbert's problems and the Millennium Prize Problems. Reception in the mathematical community is reflected in citations recorded in indexes maintained by MathSciNet, Web of Science, and bibliographies curated at the Kraków Academy of Sciences and other national academies including the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Notable Articles and Contributors

Noteworthy contributions have come from scholars connected to traditions established by Stefan Banach, Wacław Sierpiński, Kazimierz Kuratowski, and visiting authors such as Paul Erdős, André Weil, Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, Michael Atiyah, John Milnor, Srinivasa Ramanujan (in influence), Enrico Bombieri, Curtis T. McMullen, Terence Tao, Grigori Perelman, Efim Zelmanov, Maryam Mirzakhani, Timothy Gowers, Laurent Lafforgue, László Lovász, Endre Szemerédi, William Thurston, Oleg Bogopolski, Marek Karpinski, Andrzej Schinzel, Zdzisław Pogodaev, Agnieszka Jurkiewicz, Feliks Przytycki, Bogdan Bojarski, Ryszard Engelking, Karol Borsuk, Roman Sikorski, Włodzimierz Ślebodziński, Czesław Olech, and Stanisław Ulam. These works address problems with historical links to the International Congress of Mathematicians, collaborations with institutes like the Steklov Institute of Mathematics, and thematic overlaps with publications from Annals of Mathematics, Inventiones Mathematicae, Journal of the American Mathematical Society, and Acta Mathematica.

Category:Mathematics journals