Generated by GPT-5-mini| Quarterly Journal of Mathematics | |
|---|---|
| Title | Quarterly Journal of Mathematics |
| Discipline | Mathematics |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| History | 1930–present |
| Issn | 0033-5606 |
| Eissn | 1464-3847 |
Quarterly Journal of Mathematics is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal publishing research in pure and applied Mathematics with historical roots tied to British mathematical societies and international scholarly networks. It publishes original articles that have influenced topics ranging from Number theory and Algebraic geometry to Topology and Functional analysis, connecting authors affiliated with institutions such as University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Princeton University, Harvard University and ETH Zurich. The journal has contributed to developments recognized by prizes like the Fields Medal, the Abel Prize, the Cole Prize, and the Wolf Prize in Mathematics.
The journal originated amid interwar developments in scholarly publishing alongside organizations such as the London Mathematical Society, the Royal Society, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and the Cambridge Philosophical Society, and it evolved during periods that included the influence of figures associated with G. H. Hardy, John Edensor Littlewood, Émile Borel, David Hilbert, and Emmy Noether. Early editorial connections involved scholars from Trinity College, Cambridge, St John's College, Oxford, Imperial College London, and the University of Manchester, intersecting with contemporary journals like Acta Mathematica, Mathematische Annalen, Annals of Mathematics, and Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. Over decades the journal adapted editorial practices influenced by events such as postwar reconstruction, the expansion of University of California, Berkeley, the growth of research in Princeton, and the internationalization exemplified by exchanges with Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and Institut Henri Poincaré.
The journal's remit covers research areas including Algebraic topology, Differential geometry, Commutative algebra, Representation theory, Analytic number theory, Harmonic analysis, Partial differential equations, and Complex analysis, addressing work relevant to scholars at King's College London, University of Tokyo, Seoul National University, and University of Toronto. Policy documents align with standards promoted by bodies such as the Committee on Publication Ethics, the Royal Society publishing guidelines, and editorial norms practiced by publishers like Cambridge University Press and Springer Nature. Submission expectations reference methodological traditions linked to authors who published in venues such as Journal of the American Mathematical Society, Inventiones Mathematicae, Duke Mathematical Journal, Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, and Transactions of the American Mathematical Society.
Editorial leadership has included editors drawn from faculties at University of Edinburgh, University of Bristol, University of Warwick, University of Manchester, and University of Glasgow, collaborating with associate editors and referees affiliated with institutions such as Columbia University, Yale University, Brown University, University of Michigan, and University of California, Los Angeles. Peer review follows single- or double-anonymous models comparable to practices at Elsevier and Oxford University Press journals, engaging external referees who have served on committees for awards like the London Mathematical Society Whitehead Prize, the Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award, and the European Research Council panels. Ethical oversight references precedents set by investigations at organizations such as Wellcome Trust and National Science Foundation panels.
The journal is published by Oxford University Press on a quarterly schedule, with issues distributed to libraries including those at British Library, Bodleian Library, Library of Congress, and research centers such as Mathematical Sciences Research Institute and CERN. Access models have transitioned from print subscriptions held by university libraries like Princeton University Library and Yale University Library to hybrid and online platforms used by JSTOR, Project Euclid, and institutional repositories maintained by arXiv-connected research groups. Licensing practices have intersected with mandates from funders such as Wellcome Trust and European Commission research programs.
The journal has published influential papers cited alongside landmark works by mathematicians associated with Andrew Wiles, Bernhard Riemann, Alexander Grothendieck, Jean-Pierre Serre, Michael Atiyah, Raoul Bott, John Milnor, Lars Ahlfors, and Paul Erdős, contributing to progress in conjectures and theorems paralleling results in Modular forms, Elliptic curves, K-theory, Gauge theory, and Index theory. Articles have been referenced in prize citations for the Fields Medal recipients and in monographs published by Cambridge University Press, Princeton University Press, and Springer-Verlag. The journal's impact is reflected in citations recorded in databases maintained by organizations such as Clarivate, Scopus, and bibliographies compiled by the European Mathematical Society.
The journal is indexed in major services including MathSciNet, Zentralblatt MATH, Scopus, Web of Science, and specialist databases used by institutions like Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu and the Max Planck Society. Metadata and abstracts are harvested by aggregators such as EBSCO, ProQuest, and library systems at Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania, and University of Sydney, facilitating discoverability alongside collections in JSTOR and platforms curated by Project Euclid.
Category:Mathematics journals Category:Oxford University Press academic journals