Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format
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Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format
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Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format Example of Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society format
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Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society — Template for authors

Categories Rank Trend in last 3 yrs
Atmospheric Science #1 of 124 -
journal-quality-icon Journal quality:
High
calendar-icon Last 4 years overview: 705 Published Papers | 9542 Citations
indexed-in-icon Indexed in: Scopus
last-updated-icon Last updated: 26/06/2020
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Related Journals

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Quality:  
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Quality:  
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CiteRatio: 4.1
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Quality:  
High
CiteRatio: 9.8
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Quality:  
High
CiteRatio: 6.9
SJR: 1.733
SNIP: 1.328

Journal Performance & Insights

Impact Factor

CiteRatio

Determines the importance of a journal by taking a measure of frequency with which the average article in a journal has been cited in a particular year.

A measure of average citations received per peer-reviewed paper published in the journal.

9.384

15% from 2018

Impact factor for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society from 2016 - 2019
Year Value
2019 9.384
2018 8.166
2017 7.804
2016 7.281
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

13.5

16% from 2019

CiteRatio for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 13.5
2019 11.6
2018 12.8
2017 11.6
2016 11.7
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • Impact factor of this journal has increased by 15% in last year.
  • This journal’s impact factor is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • CiteRatio of this journal has increased by 16% in last years.
  • This journal’s CiteRatio is in the top 10 percentile category.

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

Measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the categories and prestige of the citing journal.

Measures actual citations received relative to citations expected for the journal's category.

3.367

8% from 2019

SJR for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 3.367
2019 3.654
2018 4.51
2017 4.146
2016 4.968
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

2.93

11% from 2019

SNIP for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 2.93
2019 2.645
2018 3.085
2017 2.847
2016 3.443
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • SJR of this journal has decreased by 8% in last years.
  • This journal’s SJR is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SNIP of this journal has increased by 11% in last years.
  • This journal’s SNIP is in the top 10 percentile category.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

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American Meteorological Society

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

The American Meteorological Society is a diverse organization of oceanographers and meteorologists and hydrologists, bioscientists and computer scientists, researchers and practitioners, students and teachers, doctors and lawyers, lawmakers and citizens, retirees and teenagers...... Read More

Atmospheric Science

Earth and Planetary Sciences

i
Last updated on
26 Jun 2020
i
ISSN
0003-0007
i
Impact Factor
Very High - 3.232
i
Acceptance Rate
Not provided
i
Frequency
Not provided
i
Open Access
No
i
Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy
Yellow faq
i
Plagiarism Check
Available via Turnitin
i
Endnote Style
Download Available
i
Bibliography Name
numbered
i
Citation Type
Author Year
(Blonder et al. 1982)
i
Bibliography Example
Blonder, G. E., M. Tinkham, and T. M. Klapwijk, 1982: Transition from metallic to tunneling regimes in superconducting microconstrictions: Excess current, charge imbalance, and supercurrent conversion. Phys. Rev. B, 25 (7), 4515–4532, URL 10.1103/PhysRevB.25.4515.

Top papers written in this journal

Journal Article DOI: 10.1175/1520-0477(1996)077<0437:TNYRP>2.0.CO;2
The NCEP/NCAR 40-Year Reanalysis Project

Abstract:

The NCEP and NCAR are cooperating in a project (denoted “reanalysis”) to produce a 40-year record of global analyses of atmospheric fields in support of the needs of the research and climate monitoring communities. This effort involves the recovery of land surface, ship, rawinsonde, pibal, aircraft, satellite, and other data;... The NCEP and NCAR are cooperating in a project (denoted “reanalysis”) to produce a 40-year record of global analyses of atmospheric fields in support of the needs of the research and climate monitoring communities. This effort involves the recovery of land surface, ship, rawinsonde, pibal, aircraft, satellite, and other data; quality controlling and assimilating these data with a data assimilation system that is kept unchanged over the reanalysis period 1957–96. This eliminates perceived climate jumps associated with changes in the data assimilation system. The NCEP/NCAR 40-yr reanalysis uses a frozen state-of-the-art global data assimilation system and a database as complete as possible. The data assimilation and the model used are identical to the global system implemented operationally at the NCEP on 11 January 1995, except that the horizontal resolution is T62 (about 210 km). The database has been enhanced with many sources of observations not available in real time for operations, provided b... read more read less

Topics:

Meteorological reanalysis (72%)72% related to the paper, NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis (71%)71% related to the paper, Simple Ocean Data Assimilation (58%)58% related to the paper, ERA-40 (53%)53% related to the paper, Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (51%)51% related to the paper
28,145 Citations
A Practical Guide to Wavelet Analysis.
Christopher Torrence1, Gilbert P. Compo1

Abstract:

A practical step-by-step guide to wavelet analysis is given, with examples taken from time series of the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). The guide includes a comparison to the windowed Fourier transform, the choice of an appropriate wavelet basis function, edge effects due to finite-length time series, and the relationsh... A practical step-by-step guide to wavelet analysis is given, with examples taken from time series of the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). The guide includes a comparison to the windowed Fourier transform, the choice of an appropriate wavelet basis function, edge effects due to finite-length time series, and the relationship between wavelet scale and Fourier frequency. New statistical significance tests for wavelet power spectra are developed by deriving theoretical wavelet spectra for white and red noise processes and using these to establish significance levels and confidence intervals. It is shown that smoothing in time or scale can be used to increase the confidence of the wavelet spectrum. Empirical formulas are given for the effect of smoothing on significance levels and confidence intervals. Extensions to wavelet analysis such as filtering, the power Hovmoller, cross-wavelet spectra, and coherence are described. The statistical significance tests are used to give a quantitative measure of change... read more read less

Topics:

Wavelet (69%)69% related to the paper, Wavelet transform (68%)68% related to the paper, Morlet wavelet (67%)67% related to the paper, Discrete wavelet transform (67%)67% related to the paper, Continuous wavelet (65%)65% related to the paper
View PDF
12,803 Citations
open accessOpen access Journal Article DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-11-00094.1
An Overview of CMIP5 and the Experiment Design
Karl E. Taylor1, Ronald J. Stouffer2, Gerald A. Meehl3

Abstract:

The fifth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) will produce a state-of-the- art multimodel dataset designed to advance our knowledge of climate variability and climate change. Researchers worldwide are analyzing the model output and will produce results likely to underlie the forthcoming Fifth Assessment... The fifth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) will produce a state-of-the- art multimodel dataset designed to advance our knowledge of climate variability and climate change. Researchers worldwide are analyzing the model output and will produce results likely to underlie the forthcoming Fifth Assessment Report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Unprecedented in scale and attracting interest from all major climate modeling groups, CMIP5 includes “long term” simulations of twentieth-century climate and projections for the twenty-first century and beyond. Conventional atmosphere–ocean global climate models and Earth system models of intermediate complexity are for the first time being joined by more recently developed Earth system models under an experiment design that allows both types of models to be compared to observations on an equal footing. Besides the longterm experiments, CMIP5 calls for an entirely new suite of “near term” simulations focusing on recent decades... read more read less

Topics:

Climate model (61%)61% related to the paper, Downscaling (59%)59% related to the paper, Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (59%)59% related to the paper, Coupled model intercomparison project (56%)56% related to the paper, Climate sensitivity (55%)55% related to the paper
View PDF
12,384 Citations
A Pacific interdecadal climate oscillation with impacts on salmon production
Nathan J. Mantua1, Steven R. Hare, Yuan Zhang, John M. Wallace, Robert C. Francis

Abstract:

Evidence gleaned from the instrumental record of climate data identifies a robust, recurring pattern of ocean–atmosphere climate variability centered over the midlatitude North Pacific basin. Over the past century, the amplitude of this climate pattern has varied irregularly at interannual-to-interdecadal timescales. There is... Evidence gleaned from the instrumental record of climate data identifies a robust, recurring pattern of ocean–atmosphere climate variability centered over the midlatitude North Pacific basin. Over the past century, the amplitude of this climate pattern has varied irregularly at interannual-to-interdecadal timescales. There is evidence of reversals in the prevailing polarity of the oscillation occurring around 1925, 1947, and 1977; the last two reversals correspond to dramatic shifts in salmon production regimes in the North Pacific Ocean. This climate pattern also affects coastal sea and continental surface air temperatures, as well as streamflow in major west coast river systems, from Alaska to California. read more read less

Topics:

Pacific decadal oscillation (75%)75% related to the paper, Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (65%)65% related to the paper, Climate oscillation (65%)65% related to the paper, North Pacific Oscillation (61%)61% related to the paper, Instrumental temperature record (59%)59% related to the paper
View PDF
6,719 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-83-11-1631
NCEP–DOE AMIP-II Reanalysis (R-2)

Abstract:

The NCEP–DOE Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP-II) reanalysis is a follow-on project to the “50-year” (1948–present) NCEP–NCAR Reanalysis Project. NCEP–DOE AMIP-II re-analysis covers the “20-year” satellite period of 1979 to the present and uses an updated forecast model, updated data assimilation system, improv... The NCEP–DOE Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP-II) reanalysis is a follow-on project to the “50-year” (1948–present) NCEP–NCAR Reanalysis Project. NCEP–DOE AMIP-II re-analysis covers the “20-year” satellite period of 1979 to the present and uses an updated forecast model, updated data assimilation system, improved diagnostic outputs, and fixes for the known processing problems of the NCEP–NCAR reanalysis. Only minor differences are found in the primary analysis variables such as free atmospheric geopotential height and winds in the Northern Hemisphere extratropics, while significant improvements upon NCEP–NCAR reanalysis are made in land surface parameters and land–ocean fluxes. This analysis can be used as a supplement to the NCEP–NCAR reanalysis especially where the original analysis has problems. The differences between the two analyses also provide a measure of uncertainty in current analyses. read more read less

Topics:

Meteorological reanalysis (65%)65% related to the paper, NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis (59%)59% related to the paper, Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (54%)54% related to the paper
5,177 Citations
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Of course! We support all the top citation styles, such as APA style, MLA style, Vancouver style, Harvard style, and Chicago style. For example, when you write your paper and hit autoformat, our system will automatically update your article as per the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society citation style.

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Sign up for our free trial, and you'll be able to use all our features for seven days. You'll see how helpful they are and how inexpensive they are compared to other options, Especially for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

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Yes. You can choose the right template, copy-paste the contents from the word document, and click on auto-format. Once you're done, you'll have a publish-ready paper Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society that you can download at the end.

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Of course! You can do this using our intuitive editor. It's very easy. If you need help, our support team is always ready to assist you.

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12. Is Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society's impact factor high enough that I should try publishing my article there?

To be honest, the answer is no. The impact factor is one of the many elements that determine the quality of a journal. Few of these factors include review board, rejection rates, frequency of inclusion in indexes, and Eigenfactor. You need to assess all these factors before you make your final call.

13. What is Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society?

SHERPA/RoMEO Database

We extracted this data from Sherpa Romeo to help researchers understand the access level of this journal in accordance with the Sherpa Romeo Archiving Policy for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. The table below indicates the level of access a journal has as per Sherpa Romeo's archiving policy.

RoMEO Colour Archiving policy
Green Can archive pre-print and post-print or publisher's version/PDF
Blue Can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF
Yellow Can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)
White Archiving not formally supported
FYI:
  1. Pre-prints as being the version of the paper before peer review and
  2. Post-prints as being the version of the paper after peer-review, with revisions having been made.

14. What are the most common citation types In Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society?

The 5 most common citation types in order of usage for Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society are:.

S. No. Citation Style Type
1. Author Year
2. Numbered
3. Numbered (Superscripted)
4. Author Year (Cited Pages)
5. Footnote

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16. Can I download Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society in Endnote format?

Yes, SciSpace provides this functionality. After signing up, you would need to import your existing references from Word or Bib file to SciSpace. Then SciSpace would allow you to download your references in Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Endnote style according to Elsevier guidelines.

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