1、POFAIP期刊模板Sample manuscript for Physics of FluidsA. Author,1,2,a) B. Author,2,b,c) and C. Author3,c)1Department, University, City, Postal code, Country2Corporation or Laboratory, Street address, Postal code, City, Country3Department, University, City, State (spell out full name), Zip code, USAThis i
2、s an abstract. It gives the reader an overview of the manuscript. Abstracts are required for all manuscripts. The Abstract should be self-contained (contain no footnotes or citations to references). It should be adequate as an index (giving all subjects, major and minor, about which new information
3、is given), and as a summary (giving the conclusions and all results of general interest in the article). It should be approximately 250 words. The abstract should be written as one paragraph and should not contain displayed mathematical equations or tabular material. In this sample article we provid
4、e instructions on how to prepare and submit your paper to Physics of Fluids, a journal published by AIP Publishing LLC. The AIP Publishing staff appreciates your effort to follow our style when preparing your manuscript.I. INTRODUCTION: THE MANUSCRIPT Please use this “sample manuscript” as a guide f
5、or preparing your article. This will ensure that your submission will be in the required format for Peer Review. Please read all of the following manuscript preparation instructions carefully and in their entirety. The manuscript must be in good scientific American English; this is the authors respo
6、nsibility. All files will be submitted through our online electronic submission system at http:/pof.peerx-press.org. A.Manuscript preparationArticles can be prepared as either a Microsoft Word .doc/.docx file or a REVTeX/LaTeX file. The entire manuscript, should be set up for 21.6 28 cm (8-1/2 11 in
7、. or A4) pages with 2.54 cm (1 in.) margins all the way around. The font and the point size will be reset according to the journals specs, but authors most commonly use the Times Roman font and point size 12. The manuscript begins with a title, names of all authors and their affiliations, and an abs
8、tract, followed by the body of the paper, tables and figures, if any, included, and the reference section. Consecutively number all tables (I, II, III, etc.) and figures (1, 2, 3, etc.), including those in an Appendix. Figures, with figure captions, may be embedded within the manuscript to assist th
9、e reviewers. Number all pages consecutively, beginning with 1._Note: This is an example of a footnote to the title if the paper was part of a conference: Contributed paper, published as part of the Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Physics, Anytown, State, May 2010.a)This is an exa
10、mple of a footnote to an authors name: Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail: *.c) This research was performed while B. Author was at Anywhere National Laboratory, City, State, Postal code, Country.d) B. Author and C. Author contributed equally to this work.B. Manuscript
11、 submissionAll files will be submitted through the online system: http:/pof.peerx-press.org/. Each version of the manuscript (the original and subsequent revisions) should be submitted with its own complete set of files: a cover letter (indicating the title, authors, and contact information), a comp
12、lete article file, and separate figure files (see Sec. IXFIGURES). When uploading a revised manuscript, also include a response/rebuttal letter (indicating the changes made to address the Editors and Reviewers comments). II. MANUSCRIPT LENGTHRegular Articles have no length restrictions.Letters can b
13、e no longer than 7 composed pages.Comments and Responses can be no longer than 5 composed pages.Photogallery entries can be no longer than 2 composed pages. III. TITLEThe title of a paper should be as concise as possible but informative enough to facilitate information retrieval. Acronyms are not al
14、lowed in the title; they must be spelled out (exception to this rule is DNA). Chemical compounds are allowed in the title.IV. AUTHORS NAMES AND ADDRESSES Authors names should preferably be written in a standard form for all publications to facilitate indexing and to avoid ambiguities. Include the na
15、mes and postal addresses of all institutions, followed by city, state, zip code, and USA if in the United States or by postal code, city, and country if not in the U.S. Please provide the complete address for each author. See the byline of this sample article for examples.Authors with Chinese, Japan
16、ese, or Korean names may choose to have their names published in their own language alongside the English versions of their names in the author list of their publications. For Chinese, authors may use either Simplified or Traditional characters. Chinese, Japanese, or Korean characters must be includ
17、ed within the author list of the manuscript when submitting or resubmitting. The manuscript must be prepared using Microsoft Word or using the CJK LaTeX package. Specific guidelines are given here. V. FOOTNOTESFootnotes are generally unacceptable in Physics of Fluids, with the exception of footnotes
18、 to the title and the authors names. Footnotes to the title should be set as a Note above the byline footnotes. All other footnotes should be converted to text or should be included in the reference section. Use a), b), c), etc., for footnotes to authors. The following list shows some examples:Note:
19、 Contributed paper, published as part of the Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Physics, Anytown, State, January 2011.a)A. Author and B. Author contributed equally to this work.b)This research was performed while C. Author was at Anywhere National Laboratory, City, State, Postal cod
20、e, Country.c)This is an example of a footnote to an authors name: Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail: *. VI. HEADINGSHeadings are not mandatory in regular articles but are preferred. Letters should not have headings. It is best to maintain a consistent heading style w
21、ithin the article. Numbered section headings are preferred in Physics of Fluids. Following is a list that shows the four different levels and style for each heading:I. PRINCIPAL HEADINGA. First subheading 1. Second subheading a. Third subheadingVII. EQUATIONSEquations need to be editable so we recom
22、mend that you create them with the built-in Microsoft Equation Editor included with your version of Word. If you wish to use Mathtype, check for compatibility at oUsers of the Windows version of Word: Please embed all fonts.oUsers of Macintosh Word: Please save all files in DOCX format, as the use o
23、f DOC is not supported. Additionally, because font embedding is not possible, Mac Word users should limit their font selection to those available from the basic installation.Equations should be punctuated and aligned to bring out their structure and should be numbered on the right. Mathematical oper
24、ation signs indicating continuity of the expression should be placed at the left of the second and succeeding lines. Use () rather than a centered dot, except for scalar products of vectors. A solidus (/) instead of built-up fractions is preferred in running text and in display wherever clarity woul
25、d not be jeopardized. Use “exp” for complicated exponents. Some examples follow: , (1) (2), (3) . (4)Equation numbering Equations are numbered consecutively through the entire paper as simply (1), (2), (3). In appendixes, the numbering starts over as (A1), (A2), (A3). If there is more than one appen
26、dix, use (A1), (A2), etc. for equations in Appendix A; (B1), (B2), etc., for equations in Appendix B. When a numbered equation has more than one part and that (those) part(s) consecutively follow, then they are indicated as follows: (21) (22a) (22b) (22c)If, however, they do not follow consecutively
27、, primes are used: (21) (22a) (22b) (21) (21) VIII. ACRONYMS AND NOTATIONAcronyms, except for the most common (such as 2D, rms, or ac) must be spelled out when they first appear both in the abstract and again in the text. Spell out machine names, except for those not considered acronyms (such as ITE
28、R or DIII-D). Try to avoid the excessive use of acronyms or specialized jargon. Notation must be legible, clear, compact, and consistent with standard usage. Choose commonly used symbols from your discipline. All unusual symbols whose identity may not be obvious must be identified the first time the
29、y appear, and at all subsequent times when confusion might arise. Superscripts are normally set directly over subscripts; authors should note where readability or the meaning requires a special order. IX. FIGURES Cite figures in text in numerical order of publication-ready illustrations. It is vital
30、 that you prepare your illustrations so that they are legible when reduced. Figures 16 show examples of various types of production-ready illustrations: color, line art, halftone, and combination (line art and halftone). Table I gives (a) general guidelines for preparing your illustrations and (b) g
31、uidelines for the preparation of electronic files. FIG. 1. This figure will appear in color in print and online. Figures should be created at 600 dpi and submitted at 600 dpi for the best presentation. Choose CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) for any figure that will appear in color in the print v
32、ersion. FIG. 2. This figure will appear in color only in the online version only, not in the printed version. Figures should be created at 600 dpi and submitted at 600 dpi for the best presentation. Choose RGB (red, green, blue) for any figure that will appear in color only online. FIG. 3. This is a good
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