From: Greg Kuperberg <greg@matching.math.ucdavis.edu>
Subject: Notices article on on the xxx mathematics archive
Date: Wed, 8 Jul 1998 16:29:55 -0700 (PDT)

Subject: Mathematics Journals Should Be Electronic and Free(ly Accessible)

[Reposted from the August 1998 Notices of the AMS, see
    http://www.ams.org/notices/199807/commentary.pdf]

Except for one word, that was the title of Steven Krantz's Letter from
the Editor in the September 1997 Notices. Krantz's letter began: "Of
course *I* don't believe what the title says. But I got your attention."
He then lists problems he sees with free electronic journals.  Three of
these objections deserve a response by those, like ourselves, who *do*
agree with the title. They are: 1) Electronic media are perishable, 2)
Electronic formats change frequently, and 3) Electronic journals still
have major costs.

Below is a description of an important new initiative---the LANL
Mathematics E-print Archive---for the storage and distribution of
electronic research articles.  We expect that over the next several
years it will become the home of a substantial fraction of the entire
primary mathematical literature.

Numerous benefits will accrue from having a carefully managed, uniform
database of nearly the entire mathematical literature. Here we comment
only on how it can help provide solutions to the above three problems.

1) The LANL e-print archive is mirrored in sixteen countries. No
credible catastrophe could simultaneously destroy all these independent
repositories.

2) Only rarely used or poorly maintained databases are at risk when
electronic formats change.  Large, widely used databases, such as the
LANL archive, can be and have been translated to new formats with mininal
cost and effort.

3) Using a model referred to as an "overlay" journal, the LANL e-print
archive will enable publishers to produce electronic journals at minimum
cost and with minimum fees. An overlay journal evaluates papers in the
time-honored manner, but authors submit papers by first contributing
them to the LANL math archive and then providing the papers ID number to
the journal.  Accepted papers constitute the journal; they are available
from the journal's web site, but they continue to be directly accessible
from the LANL archive.

Other electronic journals will choose to go beyond this bare-bones
approach, adding value in various ways (for example by copy-editing
authors' manuscripts). This will incur added expense, but by avoiding
the costs of printing, binding, and mailing, these electronic journals
too will be considerably less expensive to produce than traditional
paper journals.

The cost savings of "going electronic" can contribute substantially to
the most essential goal of publication: keeping the entire mathematical
primary literature freely available to scholars everywhere. And insofar
as we mathematicians leave our papers on the LANL e-print archive,
no one will be prevented from accessing them.

  Greg Kuperberg, David Morrison, Richard Palais
    (for the LANL Mathematics E-print Archive Steering Committee)

                 -----------------------

              The LANL Mathematics E-print archive.

A new service has been established that could have significant
consequences for research in mathematics and for the mathematical
community: the LANL Mathematics E-print Archive.  The Steering Committee*
invites you to explore this archive on the Web, at either the UC Davis
front end (http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/) or directly at Los Alamos
(http://xxx.lanl.gov/).

The LANL physics archive has more than 70,000 e-prints, accruing at a rate
of over 20,000 per year.  Maintained by a full-time staff, and funded by
DOE and NSF, it offers many technical conveniences, including an automatic
TeX compilation system with next-day distribution, e-mail notification,
search facilities, and a network of mirror sites in 16 countries.
The mathematics archive was formed at the beginning of 1998 from various
subject-based e-print archives on the Internet; although new, it already
has over 5,000 e-prints, and is increasing by over 150 each month. The
Steering Committee is a group of mathematicians formed to direct this
expansion in coordination with the LANL archive staff at Los Alamos.

Fundamental changes in scholarly communication in mathematics are on
the horizon, and we believe that mathematicians need to intervene now to
ensure that the system that emerges meets our needs.  Historically, the
mathematical literature has been maintained by an array of publishers,
and universal indexing (provided by Math Reviews and Zentrallblatt)
has only come afterwards.  With the Internet, it is possible, and in
our view important and desirable, for the mathematical community to
establish a free, universal, primary database of e-prints, that will
allow rapid access to the literature from anywhere in the world.

We invite each of you to submit at least one research article
in mathematics to LANL to learn the system.  (Instructions are
available at http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/submissions.html or at
http://xxx.lanl.gov/help/submit .)  Anything you contribute will give
your work immediate and significant visibility, since thousands of
mathematicians regularly browse the archive. More importantly, your
presence will encourage your closest colleagues to contribute also;
it will help establish the use of LANL e-prints in your research areas.

* The Steering Committee for the LANL Mathematics E-print Archive
is composed of: Gilbert Baumslag, Robert Bryant, Bill Casselman, Joe
Christy, Paul Ginsparg (ex officio), Greg Kuperberg, Robert Lazarsfeld,
Elliott Lieb, Dave Morrison (committee chair), Andy Odlyzko, Dick Palais,
Jim Stasheff, Mark Steinberger, and Bill Thurston.

