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Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society
H-index 11

Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society

Ranking & Metrics

Discipline name Position Best Scientists Publications D-Index
Mathematics 237 43 47 11

Additional Metrics

Number of Best Scientists*: 45
Documents by Best Scientists*: 49
Top 100 Ranked Scientists*: 2
SCIMAGO H-index: 67
SCIMAGO SJR: 2.331
Impact Factor: 1.6

Overview

Top Research Topics at Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society?

The aim of the journal is to expand the discussion of research in Pure mathematics, Mathematical analysis, Algebra, Combinatorics and Discrete mathematics. Discussions in the journal are anchored in the subject of Pure mathematics and the similar topic of Type (model theory).

  • Pure mathematics (36.54%)
  • Mathematical analysis (17.42%)
  • Algebra (14.25%)

What are the most cited papers published in the journal?

  • On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem (5837 citations)
  • Diffusion by Continuous Movements (2343 citations)
  • On The Instability Of Jets (2246 citations)

Research areas of the most cited articles at Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society:

The journal articles are mainly concerned with subjects like Pure mathematics, Mathematical analysis, Combinatorics, Algebra and Discrete mathematics. The study on Pure mathematics presented in the most cited articles is investigated in conjunction with research in Type (model theory).

What topics the last edition of the journal is best known for?

  • Mathematical analysis
  • Quantum mechanics
  • Pure mathematics

The previous edition focused in particular on these issues:

The foci of the journal are Pure mathematics, Combinatorics, Type (model theory), Conjecture and Equivariant map. Some problems in Pure mathematics that were presented in it overlapped with concepts under Torus, Moduli and Riemann–Hilbert correspondence. Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society addresses concerns in Combinatorics which are intertwined with other disciplines, such as Bounded function and Exponential function.

Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society focuses on Type (model theory) but the discussions also offer insight into other areas such as Centralizer and normalizer, Component (group theory), Involution (philosophy), Fusion and Projective test. Conjecture research featured in Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society incorporates concerns from various other topics such as Divisor (algebraic geometry), Scattering theory, Neighbourhood (graph theory), Algebraically closed field and Corollary. While Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society focused on Equivariant map, it was also able to explore topics like Context (language use), Complex conjugate, Fixed point and Quiver.

The most cited articles from the last journal are:

  • Refined estimates concerning sumsets contained in the roots of unity (16 citations)
  • Motivic Chern classes and K-theoretic stable envelopes (12 citations)
  • Campana points of bounded height on vector group compactifications (8 citations)

Papers citation over time

A key indicator for each journal is its effectiveness in reaching other researchers with the papers published at that venue.

The chart below presents the interquartile range (first quartile 25%, median 50% and third quartile 75%) of the number of citations of articles over time.

The top authors publishing in Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society (based on the number of publications) are:

  • G. H. Hardy (31 papers) absent at the last edition,
  • T. J. I'a. Bromwich (28 papers) absent at the last edition,
  • Samuel Roberts (24 papers) absent at the last edition,
  • Horace Lamb (23 papers) absent at the last edition,
  • John Griffiths (22 papers) absent at the last edition.

The overall trend for top authors publishing in this journal is outlined below. The chart shows the number of publications at each edition of the journal for top authors.

Only papers with recognized affiliations are considered

The top affiliations publishing in Proceedings of The London Mathematical Society (based on the number of publications) are:

  • University of Cambridge (266 papers) published 2 papers at the last edition, 1 less than at the previous edition,
  • University of Oxford (136 papers) published 1 paper at the last edition, 3 less than at the previous edition,
  • University College London (91 papers) published 2 papers at the last edition, 1 more than at the previous edition,
  • University of Warwick (83 papers) published 2 papers at the last edition, 1 more than at the previous edition,
  • University of Liverpool (80 papers) absent at the last edition.

The overall trend for top affiliations publishing in this journal is outlined below. The chart shows the number of publications at each edition of the journal for top affiliations.

Publication chance based on affiliation

The publication chance index shows the ratio of articles published by the best research institutions in the journal edition to all articles published within that journal. The best research institutions were selected based on the largest number of articles published during all editions of the journal.

The chart below presents the percentage ratio of articles from top institutions (based on their ranking of total papers).Top affiliations were grouped by their rank into the following tiers: top 1-10, top 11-20, top 21-50, and top 51+. Only articles with a recognized affiliation are considered.

During the most recent 2021 edition, 2.22% of publications had an unrecognized affiliation. Out of the publications with recognized affiliations, 18.18% were posted by at least one author from the top 10 institutions publishing in the journal. Another 6.82% included authors affiliated with research institutions from the top 11-20 affiliations. Institutions from the 21-50 range included 13.64% of all publications and 61.36% were from other institutions.

Returning Authors Index

A very common phenomenon observed among researchers publishing scientific articles is the intentional selection of journals they have already attended in the past. In particular, it is worth analyzing the case when the authors participate in the same journal from year to year.

The Returning Authors Index presented below illustrates the ratio of authors who participated in both a given as well as the previous edition of the journal in relation to all participants in a given year.

Returning Institution Index

The graph below shows the Returning Institution Index, illustrating the ratio of institutions that participated in both a given and the previous edition of the conference in relation to all affiliations present in a given year.

The experience to innovation index

Our experience to innovation index was created to show a cross-section of the experience level of authors publishing in a journal. The index includes the authors publishing at the last edition of a journal, grouped by total number of publications throughout their academic career (P) and the total number of citations of these publications ever received (C).

The group intervals were selected empirically to best show the diversity of the authors' experiences, their labels were selected as a convenience, not as judgment. The authors were divided into the following groups:

  • Novice - P < 5 or C < 25 (the number of publications less than 5 or the number of citations less than 25),
  • Competent - P < 10 or C < 100 (the number of publications less than 10 or the number of citations less than 100),
  • Experienced - P < 25 or C < 625 (the number of publications less than 25 or the number of citations less than 625),
  • Master - P < 50 or C < 2500 (the number of publications less than 50 or the number of citations less than 2500),
  • Star - P ≥ 50 and C ≥ 2500 (both the number of publications greater than 50 and the number of citations greater than 2500).

The chart below illustrates experience levels of first authors in cases of publications with multiple authors.

Top Publications

  • Cwikel estimates revisited

    Galina Levitina;Fedor Sukochev;Dmitriy Zanin

    (2020)
    44 Citations
  • Boundary spike-layer solutions of the singular Keller–Segel system: existence and stability

    Jose A. Carrillo;Jingyu Li;Zhi An Wang

    (2021)
    39 Citations
  • On residual categories for Grassmannians

    Alexander Kuznetsov;Alexander Kuznetsov;Alexander Kuznetsov;Maxim Smirnov

    (2020)
    31 Citations
  • Hall algebras and quantum symmetric pairs I: Foundations

    (2022)
    28 Citations
  • A family of mass‐critical Keller–Segel systems

    (2022)
    26 Citations
  • Shift‐invariance for vertex models and polymers

    (2022)
    17 Citations
  • Absence of eigenvalues of non-self-adjoint Robin Laplacians on the half-space

    L. Cossetti;L. Cossetti;D. Krejčiřík

    (2020)
    15 Citations
  • Analytic hypoellipticity of Keldysh operators

    Jeffrey Galkowski;Maciej Zworski

    (2021)
    14 Citations
  • An intrinsic approach to relative braid group symmetries on ı$\imath$ quantum groups

    (2022)
    14 Citations
  • A measure estimate in geometry of numbers and improvements to Dirichlet's theorem

    (2021)
    13 Citations

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