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Manual of Style by AIP From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The AIP Style is a manual of style created and developed by the American Institute of Physics. It is the most common style used in physics publications.[1][2][3]
The AIP Style Guide is the book that defines the AIP style. It is distributed for free by AIP on their website in the section Featured Resources for Researchers.[4] The most recent version is the 4th edition, published in 1990.[5] The 1st edition was published in 1951, at the request of the AIP Publication Board.[5]
The following editions, revisions, reprints have been realized:[5]
The 4th edition is organized as follows:[5]
The AIP Style Guide includes a definition of the AIP citation format, via TABLE II of the "10. Footnotes and references" section of Chapter II.[5] They are also covered in C. Lipson's Cite Right,[1] as well as in a document by Taylor & Francis,[6] and by various university library resources.[3][2][7][8]
Various reference management software include modules to export sources to AIP citation format, including Zotero[9] and EndNote.[10]
For journal articles, some examples of proper AIP citation formats are reproduced below:
Some of the criteria include[1][6]
While the American Physical Society (APS) has its own style guide defined via the document Physical Review Style and Notation Guide,[11] it still uses the AIP citation format and follows much of the style conventions of the AIP style. In chemistry, there is the ACS style, created and developed by the American Chemical Society (ACS).
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