---
name: reports-on-progress-in-physics
description: Use when targeting Reports on Progress in Physics (RoPP) or deciding whether a physics review manuscript fits this IOP authoritative progress-report venue. Encodes the journal's fit, framing, method-and-evidence bar, house style, official-submission re-check, and desk-reject heuristics.
---

# Reports on Progress in Physics (reports-on-progress-in-physics)

## Journal positioning

Reports on Progress in Physics is the Institute of Physics (IOP) Publishing journal for authoritative, in-depth review articles — "progress reports" — that survey the state of understanding in a physics topic and define its frontier. Like its APS counterpart Reviews of Modern Physics, RoPP is largely an invited venue; most content is solicited by the editorial board from recognized experts who can deliver a comprehensive, critical, and pedagogically clear account of a field. The readership spans the physics community broadly: specialists seeking a definitive reference, researchers entering an adjacent area, and advanced students. Primary research results are outside scope; RoPP articles synthesize what is established, identify what is contested, and map the open questions ahead.

This skill is a **fit / venue-selection / re-framing** tool. It does not replace the journal's current official submission guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live author instructions on the IOP Publishing site and the RoPP submission system.

## When to trigger

- An author has been invited by the RoPP editorial board to write a progress report.
- An expert author is considering proposing a review topic to RoPP editors and needs to understand the scope and editorial expectations.
- A physicist wants to compare RoPP versus `reviews-of-modern-physics` to determine which venue is more appropriate for a proposed review.
- A primary-research manuscript is being mis-targeted here and requires re-routing.

## Scope & topic fit

- Comprehensive progress reports on active or recently matured physics subfields: condensed matter, quantum physics, nuclear and particle physics, plasma physics, AMO physics, quantum information, astrophysics, biological physics, photonics, and interdisciplinary areas where physics is central.
- Emerging paradigm areas where a critical synthesis is needed: topological materials, gravitational-wave physics, ultracold quantum matter, quantum computing hardware, precision tests of fundamental physics.
- Pedagogically valuable reports that serve both specialists and physicists crossing into the field; RoPP reviews are expected to be self-contained in their foundational section.
- Topics of sufficient breadth and maturity to warrant a definitive progress-report treatment; reviews of a single group's research program or a single technique without field-wide synthesis context are not appropriate.
- Primary experimental or theoretical research results without a surrounding synthesis framework are outside scope.

## Method & evidence bar

- The review must be comprehensive within its stated scope: major theoretical frameworks, experimental observations, and computational methods must all be addressed; significant omissions undermine the "progress report" mandate.
- Critical evaluation is expected: the authors should assess the strength of evidence for key claims, identify areas of consensus versus ongoing controversy, and flag where the community is uncertain.
- Pedagogical completeness is required: foundational concepts must be derived or explained at a level that allows a physics-PhD-level reader from an adjacent subfield to follow; this distinguishes RoPP from a literature survey.
- Historical context situating how the field reached its current state is part of the RoPP genre and should not be omitted.
- Quantitative claims must trace to the primary literature with citations; the review does not generate new data and should not present unreported analysis as its own contribution.

## Structure & house style

- RoPP articles are long-form by design — comparable in scope and depth to a focused monograph chapter; the length should reflect the scope of the topic, not be artificially constrained.
- A structured outline is essential for navigation; section hierarchy (numbered sections and subsections) is standard and expected by RoPP readers.
- An accessible introduction placing the topic in the context of physics broadly must precede specialist content; the first section should be readable by any physicist.
- An extensive reference list is expected; RoPP reviews are the primary citation that subsequent papers use for "for a review, see …" and completeness is a community trust obligation.
- The outlook/conclusion section should identify genuinely open questions and debate their probable trajectories; speculation clearly flagged as such is acceptable and valued.
- Tables summarizing experimental parameters, materials properties, or computational benchmarks across the literature are a signature RoPP exhibit type.

## Official-submission checklist

- Before giving submission-ready advice, read `../../resources/source-basis.md` and `../../resources/official-source-map.md`; start from the official source anchors for this journal family, then cite the current journal-specific page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Reports on Progress in Physics author guidelines" and follow the current IOP Publishing version.
- Confirm that the editorial board has invited the topic or respond to an invitation before preparing a full manuscript; unsolicited complete manuscripts without prior editorial contact are rare and typically require a proposal-inquiry first.
- Re-check article format requirements: IOP LaTeX templates, reference style (IOP preferred format), figure resolution and file-format specifications.
- Re-check IOP data and software availability policies if computational results or community datasets are discussed.
- Re-check copyright, open-access, and licensing options; IOP offers hybrid and full-OA routes and the APC must be confirmed if OA is chosen.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.

## Pre-submission self-check

- [ ] Editorial invitation or prior editorial engagement has occurred; submitting unsolicited primary data here is a category error.
- [ ] The review synthesizes the field, not just the authors' own contributions; coverage is balanced and representative.
- [ ] The introduction is accessible to a physicist from an adjacent subfield without requiring specialist background.
- [ ] Controversies and unsettled questions are explicitly identified and balanced, not glossed over.
- [ ] The reference list is comprehensive; seminal contributions across the field's development are all cited.
- [ ] The outlook section identifies specific open problems and their significance for the field.

## Common desk-reject triggers

- Unsolicited primary-research papers submitted to RoPP; these are outside scope and editors return them immediately.
- Reviews that are essentially extended accounts of the author's own group's research without field-wide synthesis.
- Articles with an introduction or opening sections written at specialist depth inaccessible to the broader physics community.
- Reviews that do not engage with major competing interpretations or theoretical frameworks; one-sided synthesis is considered a quality failure.
- Incomplete reference coverage — missing well-known foundational or recent landmark papers is flagged routinely by RoPP reviewers.

## Re-routing decision

For definitive, authoritative physics reviews with APS editorial culture, `reviews-of-modern-physics` (APS Colloquia and Reviews) is the closest peer venue; both are largely invited. For broad physics conceptual syntheses in shorter format targeting non-specialists, `nature-physics` publishes Review articles and Perspectives (often invited). For primary research advancing a specific area, redirect to the appropriate APS archival journal (`physical-review-b`, `physical-review-d`) or to `physical-review-letters` / `physical-review-x` for high-significance original results.

## Output format

```text
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Reports on Progress in Physics
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest topics>
[Method/evidence] <is this an invited, comprehensive, critical synthesis of a field — not new primary research?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <invitation status / IOP template / reference style / data policy / OA/APC>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>
```
