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Help: About this Service
JET Joint Undertaking is a European fusion research project in Oxfordshire,
England. The Joint European Torus (JET) is one of the largest and most
powerful fusion experiments in the world. JET's objective is to provide
a clean and virtually limitless source of energy for centuries to come.
History
JET Joint Undertaking is responsible for publishing the output of the
laboratory in the form of technical reports and research papers. These
publications were freely available to the public as hard copy preprints and JET
distributed these articles to academic and research libraries. Institute
of Physics Publishing now host the JET Preprints and Reports service, where
Preprints, Reports and Conference Papers are freely and instantly
available.
JET Preprints (EFD-P series)
The normal channel for publication of the results of JET original work is within the conventional
literature (i.e. Scientific Journals, Books, and similar publications). However, such papers are
given advanced distribution as pre-publication editions in the JET Preprint (EFD-P) series. The
documents are graded - Unclassified - Approved for publication. Copies carry a standard statement
drawing attention to its Preprint status and prohibiting use of extracts or referencing the document
prior to full publication.
JET Conference Papers (EFD-C Series)
This is a new JET series and includes all JET contributions made to each major International
Conference and gathered together in one volume. This includes Invited papers, Oral Contributions
and Contributed papers. These documents carry the marking - Unclassified - Approved for Publication.
Copies carry a standard statement drawing attention to its Conference Preprint status and prohibiting the
use of extracts or referencing the document prior to publication of the Conference Proceedings.
JET Reports (JET-R Series)
The JET Report series is used for all communications which might be expected to find interest in
readers outside JET, which, for one reason or another, would not be suitable for publication in the
conventional literature. Examples are: reports of unusual length, such as those including many experimental
or technical details; reports of very specialised interest, etc. These reports are marked Unclassified and
are widely available to the public. JET Reports are considered as publications and offer protection for priority
of discovery.
See also:
Help Index
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