
Some charges may apply in the circumstances described below:ġ. There is no charge for submitting a paper to MNRAS. Errata may only be submitted by the authors of the original paper, and should be used to correct errors which may lead to significant misunderstandings or incorrect conclusions. Electronic publication means that colour is fully supported, without charge and at the discretion of the author.Įrrata are short corrections to papers which have previously been published in MNRAS. This enables the fastest possible publication, widest dissemination to the research community and greatest impact. They are published within 30 days of receipt of the final manuscript files in the production office, and linked immediately into the NASA ADS.

Letters are published rapidly after acceptance in a separately paginated section of the journal and appear online. Authors are required to state their reasons for seeking publication in the form of a Letter when submitting their manuscript.

They must not exceed five pages in length, and are handled along a fast-track process. Letters should be self-contained and describe the results of an original study whose rapid publication might be expected to have a significant and immediate impact on the development of research in the associated subject area. There are no page limits, but it is important for papers to be concise: referees and editors may suggest shortening of any that are not, which may lead to delay in acceptance. Main Journal papers are the most common type of paper published. Three types of paper are published by MNRAS: Main Journal papers, Letters, and Errata. Assessment of whether papers fall within this scope is made by the members of the editorial board, who will reject papers which are not on suitable topics. MNRAS publishes the results of original research in astronomy and astrophysics, including work which is observational, theoretical or concerned with astronomical instrumentation and software.

Authors are asked to read these instructions carefully. The processing of papers has two major – and largely separate – elements: editorial review by the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS, section 4), and production by Oxford University Press (OUP, section 5).

Over three-quarters of papers published by MNRAS originate from outside the UK. There are no restrictions based on nationality, institutional affiliation, qualifications etc. Anyone may submit a paper to be considered for publication in MNRAS. First published in 1827, MNRAS is one of the world’s largest and most prestigious astronomy journals. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS) is a peer-reviewed scientific journal which publishes research in astronomy and astrophysics. Instructions to Authors 1 Overview 1.1 Scope 1.2 Paper types 1.3 Charges 2 Preparing a manuscript 2.1 LaTeX 2.2 Microsoft Word and other word processors 2.3 Contents 2.4 Figures and tables 2.5 Language 2.6 Copyright and plagiarism 2.7 Catalogues and online material 2.8 Errata 2.9 Data Policyģ Submitting a paper 3.1 Ethics 3.2 Newsworthy articles 3.3 Submissions through Overleaf 3.4 Submissions through ScholarOne Manuscripts 3.5 Preprint policy 4 Editorial review 4.1 Decisions 4.2 Submitting a revised version 4.3 First Look 5 Publication 5.1 Author Services 5.2 Licence form 5.3 Artwork 5.4 Proofs 5.5 Open Access 6 Style guide 6.1 Layout 6.2 Spelling, grammar, punctuation and mathematics 6.3 References and citations 6.4 Miscellaneous journal style 7 Contacts
