---
name: prl-cover-letter
description: Use when writing the cover letter for a Physical Review Letters submission, which must justify to APS editors why the work meets PRL's importance-and-broad-interest criteria. Drafts the editorial case; does not edit the manuscript itself.
---

# PRL Cover Letter (prl-cover-letter)

## When to trigger

- You are about to submit and need the cover letter
- The editors will triage primarily on importance + broad interest, and you must make that case
- A prior submission was declined on importance/breadth grounds and you are reframing
- You need to suggest/oppose referees within the cover letter (coordinate with `prl-referee-strategy`)

## Purpose of the PRL cover letter

The cover letter's central job is to convince an APS editor — who may not be a specialist in your exact subfield — that the Letter **clears the importance + broad-interest gate** and merits review at PRL rather than at a specialized Physical Review journal. It is the breadth argument that the editor uses to decide whether to send the paper out for review at all.

It is not an abstract, not a summary, and not a place to oversell. It is a concise, specific, editor-facing case.

## Structure (concise, ~3–5 short paragraphs)

1. **Submission line** — title, that it is submitted as a Letter to PRL, and the appropriate subject area / editor track.
2. **The central result** — one or two sentences stating the single headline claim plainly, with the key number or qualitative surprise.
3. **Why it is important** — what is new: a new effect, a decisive measurement, a resolved open question, an unlocked regime. Tie it to a prior belief it changes.
4. **Why it is of broad interest** — name the communities beyond your subfield who will care and *why*. This is the paragraph editors weigh most for PRL.
5. **Housekeeping** — originality / not under consideration elsewhere; relation to any prior arXiv or conference version; suggested and opposed referees (per `prl-referee-strategy`); any special handling.

## The broad-interest paragraph (the load-bearing one)

- Be **specific**: "This result bears on [neighboring field] because [concrete mechanism/transfer]," not "this is of broad interest to physics."
- Anchor importance to a **change in understanding**, not to novelty alone.
- If borderline, pre-empt the "why not Phys. Rev. B?" reaction by stating explicitly what makes this cross-cutting.
- Keep it honest — editors discount inflated breadth claims and it can backfire.

## Checklist

- [ ] States it is submitted as a Letter to PRL, with the right subject area
- [ ] Central claim stated in one or two sentences
- [ ] Importance tied to a concrete change in understanding (not just novelty)
- [ ] Broad-interest paragraph names specific out-of-subfield audiences and why
- [ ] Pre-empts the "specialized PR journal" reaction if borderline
- [ ] Originality / concurrent-submission statement included
- [ ] Prior arXiv/conference version disclosed if applicable
- [ ] Suggested / opposed referees included (coordinate with prl-referee-strategy)
- [ ] Tone is specific and measured, not promotional

## Anti-patterns

- A cover letter that just restates the abstract
- Asserting "broad interest to the physics community" with no concrete audience
- Overselling significance the manuscript does not support
- Omitting the breadth argument entirely (the single most common miss)
- Hiding a prior arXiv/long version that the editor will find anyway
- Generic referee suggestions with no opposed-referee rationale

## Output format

```
【Submission line】Letter to PRL, subject area: ...
【Central claim】one sentence
【Importance】new effect / decisive measurement / unlocked regime + belief changed
【Broad interest】named audiences + concrete reason (the key paragraph)
【Housekeeping】originality / prior version / referees
【Tone】specific & measured?  yes / fix
【Next】prl-referee-strategy then prl-submission
```

> Cover-letter expectations and editor-track structure are durable, but subject categories evolve — verify on the official APS / PRL author page.
