Atlantis Press Journal Style
Atlantis Press Journal Style
Atlantis Press Journal Style
Using MS-Word1
First Author2
University Department, University Name, Address
City, State ZIP/Zone, Country3
author_id@domain_name
Second Author
Group, Laboratory, Address
City, State ZIP/Zone, Country
second_author@university.com
Abstract
The abstract should summarize the context, content and conclusions of the paper in less than 200 words. It should
not contain any references or displayed equations. Typeset the abstract in 9 pt Times New Roman with interline
space of 11 pt, making an indentation of 1.5 pica on the left and right margins.
Keywords: Keyword1; Keyword2; Keyword3.
2000 Mathematics Subject Classification: 22E46, 53C35, 57S20
1. General Appearance
Contributions to the Journal of Nonlinear Mathematical Physics will mostly be processed by using
the authors source files. These should be submitted with the manuscripts, and resubmitted in the
final form if a paper requires revision before being accepted for publication.
3. Major Headings
Major headings should be typeset in boldface with the first letter of important words capitalized.
3.1. Sub-headings
Sub-headings should be typeset in boldface italic and capitalize the first letter of the first word only. Section
number to be in boldface Roman.
2.1.1. Sub-subheadings
Typeset sub-subheadings in medium face italic and capitalize the first letter of the first word only. Section
numbers to be in Roman.
Fig. 1. This is the caption for the figure. If the caption is less than one line then it is centered. Long captions
are justified manually.
4. Running Heads
Please provide a shortened running head (not more than four words, each starting with a Capital) for the title
of your paper. This will appear with page numbers on the top right-hand side of your paper on odd pages.
For the running heads for the authors names, please apply the following rules:
for one author: only the initial plus the full last name (e.g., D. Ruan),
for two authors: D. Ruan, T. Li,
for three authors or more: D. Ruan et al.
5. Equations
Authors Names
Displayed equations should be numbered consecutively in each section, with the number set flush right and
enclosed in parentheses.
1(d i < t , N (d i ) = n)
m (n, t ) = i =1
. (1)
t
1( N (s ) = n)ds
s =0
Equations should be referred to in abbreviated form, e.g., Eq. (1) or (2). In multiple-line equations, the
number should be given on the last line.
Displayed equations are to be centered on the page width. Standard English letters like x are to appear as x
(italicized) in the text if they are used as mathematical symbols. Punctuation marks are used at the end of
equations as if they appeared directly in the text.
Theorem 1. Theorems, lemmas, etc. are to be numbered consecutively in the paper. Use double spacing
before and after theorems, lemmas, etc.
7. Tables
Tables should be inserted in the text as close to the point of reference as possible. Some space should be left
above and below the table. Tables should be numbered sequentially in the text in Arabic numerals. Captions
are to be centralized above the tables. Typeset tables and captions in 9 pt Times New Roman with
baselineskip of 11 pt.
If tables need to extend over to a second page, the continuation of the table should be preceded by a
caption, e.g., Table 2. (Continued)
Table 1. This is the caption for the table. If the caption is less than one line then it is
centered. Long captions are justified to the table width manually.
NP
3 4 8 10
3 1200 2000 2500 3000
NC 5 2000 2200 2700 3400
8 2500 2700 16000 22000
10 3000 3400 22000 28000
Paper Title (4 Words maximum)
8. References
References in the text are to be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals, in the order of first appearance.
They are to be cited as superscripts without parentheses or brackets after punctuation marks like commas and
periods but before punctuation marks like colons, semi-colons and question marks, e.g.,
(1) in the statement.1
(2) have proven2 that this equation
When the reference forms part of the sentence, it should not be typed in superscripts, e.g.,
(1) One can deduce from Ref. 3 that
(2) See Refs. 13, 5 and 7 for more details.
9. Footnotes
Footnotes should be numbered sequentially in superscript lowercase Roman letters. a
Note Added
Additional note can be added before Acknowledgment.
Acknowledgements
This section should come before the References. Funding information may also be included here.
Appendix A. Appendices
Appendices should be used only when absolutely necessary. They should come after the References. If there
is more than one appendix, number them alphabetically. Number displayed equations occurring in the
Appendix in this way, e.g., (A.1), (A.2), etc.
1(d i < t , N (d i ) = n)
m (n, t ) = i =1 . (A.1)
t
1( N (s ) = n)d s
s =0
a
Footnotes should be typeset in 8 pt Times Roman at the bottom of the page.
Authors Names
References
References are to be listed in the order cited in the text. Use the style shown in the following examples. For
journal names, use the standard abbreviations. Typeset references in 9 pt Times New Roman.
[1] B. Widrow and S. d. Steams, Adaptive Signal Processing (Prentice Hall, Englewood, NJ, 1995).
[2] R. Loren and D. B. Benson (eds.), Introduction to String Field Theory, 2nd edn. (Springer-Verlag, New York, 1999).
[3] R. M. Karp, Reducibility among combinatorial problems, in Complexity of Computer Computations (Plenum, New York, 1972),
pp. 85104.
[4] R. Loren and D. B. Benson, Deterministic flow-chart interpretations, J. Comput. System Sci. 27(2) (1983) 400433.
[5] R. Loren, J. Li and D. B. Benson, Deterministic flow-chart interpretations, in Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. Entity-Relationship Approach,
eds. C. G. Davis and R. T. Yeh (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1983), pp. 421439.