About Phys. Rev. D
[ PRD News | Service Description | Getting Started ]
Physical Review D (PRD) a leading journal in elementary particle physics, field theory, gravitation, and cosmology, appears monthly in two sections, D1 and D15.
D1 reports on experimental high-energy physics, phenomenologically oriented theory of particles and fields, cosmic ray physics, electroweak interactions, applications of QCD, and lattice gauge theory.
D15 covers general relativity, quantum theory of gravitation, cosmology, particle astrophysics, formal aspects of theory of particles and fields, general and formal development in gauge field theories, string theory.
This document contains information about this online service. It
introduces recently added new features,describes the available services,
and provides information users may find helpful in getting started. As
part of an Online Help compendium the present document refers to Scitation. Scitation houses the current year
of journal content plus the previous three years. Earlier volumes are
contained in the Physical Review Online Archive (PROLA), for which a separate document is available (see About PROLA).
While many features of this online service are freely available, some require a
personal or institutional subscription. If you are able to access full-text articles and view linked references without being prompted for a password and username, you are doing so via a subscription paid for by your library or institution.
PRD News
- January 2009: All 2005 content has been moved into PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of journal content plus the previous three years.
January 2008: All 2004 content has been moved into PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of journal content plus the previous three years.
January 2007: Editorials and Announcements now have citations and dois and follow the same production process
as articles. They are available without subscription, same as errata.
January 2007: All 2003 content has been moved into PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation
houses the current year of journal content plus the previous three years.
September 2006: APS expands its Open Access (OA) offerings to articles published in Physical Review A-E,
Physical Review Letters, and Reviews of Modern Physics. This OA initiative is called FREE TO READ. The
icon will be displayed on all FREE TO READ articles. The full text (pdf) will be available without a subscription. See
http://publish.aps.org/FREETOREAD_FAQ.html for more information.
July 2006: Online PDFs of articles appearing in new volumes of Physical Review Letters, Physical Review and
Reviews of Modern Physics are now hyperlinked for more convenient on-screen navigation.
June 2006: Both PROLA and Scitation now display citing articles from publishers that participate in the
CrossRef forward linking program.
January 2006: Full text of Errata, Publisher's Notes, Editorial Notes and Retractions are now freely available without a subscription.
January 2006: All 2002 content has been moved into PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of journal content plus the previous three years.
July 2005: New volumes of Physical Review and Physical
Review Letters now contain a link from the full text pdf back to
the online abstract through the DOI (Digital Object Identifier). The
DOI link can be found below the abstract and is blue in color. There
will be a delay of a few hours between publication and activation of
the link while the DOI is being registered via CrossRef.
17 May 2005: New Abstract Displays - APS journals' abstracts pages have been redesigned with a more user-friendly interface using an updated layout and font styles. Login status is now displayed on the pages, and full text options are presented according to the login status. For example, authenticated browser sessions no longer offer "Order Document" links. Unauthenticated user displays now also include select reference and citing article lists, comprised of only those articles published in APS and AIP journals. (Full reference lists continue to be displayed for authenticated users.)
19 April 2005: Users of the APS journals on Scitation can now search all APS content
from any APS journal, since search coverage has now been extended to
include content formerly only searchable in PROLA, The American
Physical Society's Physical Review Online Archive. Search results
containing hits to articles hosted on PROLA will feature a link to the
PROLA abstract, where the full text can be accessed. (Note that access
to the full text of PROLA articles may require a separate
subscription.)
18 March 2005: Scitation® Research Alerts - Receive weekly e-mails containing the abstracts of nearly every article published in your field - drawn from approximately 4,000 journals worldwide. This fee-based service is driven by the powerful Inspec database, which provides nearly full coverage of the literature in physics, electronic and electrical engineering, computer science, communications and information technology. In addition, Inspec adds almost a half million new items yearly, drawn from journals, proceedings, books, reports, and theses. See
http://www.scitationalerts.org for details.
24 February 2005: RSS Feeds - APS is now providing content using RSS
feeds as a convenience to our readers. Journal feeds contain recently
published articles in each journal and are updated as new articles are
published. A list of all available feeds along with a set of frequently
asked questions can be found at http://feeds.aps.org or by following
the RSS link on journal pages.
5 January 2005: All 2001 content has been moved into PROLA
(Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of
journal content plus the previous three years.
5 January 2004: All 2000 content has been moved into PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of journal content
plus the previous three years.
17 December 2003: Free E-Mail ToC Alerting Service launched. See Alert Center for details.
2 January 2003:
All 1999 content has been moved into
PROLA (Physical Review Online Archives). Scitation houses the current year of journal
content plus the previous three years.
Previous "News" Listings
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Service Description
Physical Review D is published electronically one article at a time. Two new issues are "opened" at the beginning of a month and as articles complete the production process are published in those issues depending on section and subject matter (see above). The issues are "closed" at the end of the month. PRD is published monthly in two issues, D1 and D15, (12 issues per volume, two volumes per year).
Users can select from a list of all available volumes and browse
any HTML TOC, read abstracts, and view PDF (and PostScript)
articles (or place a document delivery order). Physical Review D
offers the following features:
Available Volumes
- Direct access to the Tables of Contents of recent issues including the latest, open issue.
- Browse the list of articles accepted for publication (ordered by month of acceptance). The abstracts of electronically submitted articles are also available. These can be found on the homepage in the drop down menu of Recent and Future Issues below the current issue(s).
- Access to the issue index of any volume in the current year plus
the previous three years.
- Access to earlier volumes via the Physical Review Online Archive
(PROLA).
Tables of Contents
- Browse
an HTML
version of the Table of Contents (TOC) of any issue,
including the latest open issue. The HTML TOCs contain
hyperlinks
from individual titles to the abstract of each title as well as options to view full-text
PDF
or PostScript
articles and place both online and offline document delivery orders. For more information on
viewing and printing PostScript files, consult the Online Help specific to working with
compressed
PostScript.
Abstracts
- The abstract "view" shows bibliographic information
including the citation, title, author name(s), and abstract.
In addition, author affiliation(s), PACS categories, and hyperlinked
references are available as well as links to the full-text
PDF or
PostScript
version of the article (see below).
- Reference sections are available in the abstracts for subscribers.
They include links to those citations
available in PROLA, AIP's SPIN database, IEE's INSPEC database, and the
arXiv.org E-print archive. Read
Reference Sections and Reference Linking in Abstracts for more
information.
- From the abstract "view," users can view the full-text
PDF or
PostScript
version of the article, including all figures, tables, and references. Or,
an "Order Document" link will allow users to place an order for online or
offline document delivery.
- Links to related papers are available in the abstracts;
that is,
crosslinks within a series of papers (Papers I, II,
etc.), from a Comment to the Article commented on and its
Reply, and from an Article to its Erratum (and in most
cases, the link are bidirectional; that is, the Comment
features a link to the Reply and vice versa).
For more information, read
Related-Paper ("See
Also") Citations and Links in Abstracts
in Online Help.
- "Citing Articles" links are available in the abstract for
subscribers. These links appear after the Reference Section,
and contain links to articles residing on either Scitation or
PROLA that cite the article currently being viewed. Read
Reference Sections and Reference Linking in Abstracts for more information.
- A tabular array containing additional bibliographic
information can be accessed by following the
"Additional Information" link appearing after the PACS numbers.
Searching
- Search
a database covering recent volumes (i.e., the current year plus the previous
three years of contents).
- Search a database of earlier
volumes in the Physical Review Online Archive (PROLA).
- An Author
Search Interface is available for effective searching on names with initials.
Free Access to Some Areas
- The Tables of Contents (PDF and HTML), the abstract view and searching of articles are not password protected. Password/username will only be requested for viewing full text and references, and entrance to AIP's SPIN database via the Search SPIN database link appearing on the search pages. When a password/username does apply, it is requested only once per "session." A "session" is the period between successful login (authentication) and logout (exiting), or 15 minutes of "idle" time (after which the user is automatically logged out). Password/username is NOT requested, at any point, for access via an institutional subscription.
Important Links
- The “Accepted Papers” tab on the home page provides access to listings of papers to appear in future issues of Physical Review D.
- The home page provides links to other online APS journals and to the
Physical Review Online Archive (PROLA).
Other Features
- A password-changing mechanism is available for individual users.
For access, click
here and, for more information, consult the
Online Help.
- An "Exit" button (or textual equivalent) appears at the bottom of all
PRD pages. The login system tracks the number of concurrent users on the
system (i.e., the number of logins per login name). There are limits that
are set per user and per institutional login. In order to free up a "slot"
for the next user, it is recommended that you use the "Exit" button. If
you do not, the next person logging in from your institution may not be
able to access the service for up to 15 minutes.
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Getting Started
Here is a recommended checklist for first-time PRD users:
- Make sure you have a current
browser
that supports
(a) authentication (login and password),
(b) HTML
forms (for database queries),
(c) HTML tables,
(d) JavaScript
(JavaScript support must be enabled to take full advantage of all
Article
Collection functions, as well as some functions of the
reference-linking,
related-article-linking,
and user-interface enhancing functions), and
(e) cookies.
| IMPORTANT: Authentication requires that cookies
be enabled in a cookie-capable browser; more information is available in the
Online Help.
|
While several other browsers
are "Netscape-compliant," and their use should
allow you to take full advantage of all of the journal's
features, we recommend Netscape Navigator (more details
are available from the Online
Help page). As stated, authentication is required in
order to enforce the publisher's subscription controls
over its journals. This control is based on Netscape
software products, and depends on the Netscape
"cookie" mechanism (please refer to the Scitation FAQ for more
information on cookies) to authenticate and track both
individual and institutional users throughout the system.
While browsers that do not support this mechanism may
function adequately, technical support in regard
to authentication problems will NOT be extended to
users who are not running either Netscape Navigator
(version 2.0 or higher) or Microsoft Internet Explorer
(version 2.0 or higher).
- To view full-text
PDF
versions of PRD articles you must have one of the following applications:
- the Adobe Acrobat Reader,
- the Adobe Acrobat Reader browser
plug-in,
- Adobe Acrobat Exchange, or
- another "viewer" that can display or
otherwise manipulate PDF files.
More details are available from the Online Help
page. An
Acrobat
Tutorial is also available.
- To view full-text PostScript
versions of articles, you must have a PostScript viewer
or any other application that enables you to otherwise
manipulate PostScript files [all PostScript files delivered via Scitation
(i.e., the last few years of contents) is in compressed
("gzipped") format].
More information is available from the Online Help regarding
working with
compressed
PostScript.
- PRD has been designed for
Internet access corresponding to a 14,400 bps or faster modem connection.
Tips on configuring your browser for slower connections (and to
optimize any connection) are available from the
Online Help page.
- Consult the
PRD FAQ
(Frequently Asked Questions) for a compendium of capsulized
information about PRD.
- Consult the Online Help,
especially with regard to using the Acrobat products in
conjunction with your browser, and for detailed tutorials
on how to search the PRD databases.
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