IEEE Journal on Miniaturization for Air and Space Systems
Published by IEEE
eISSN : 2576-3164
Abbreviation : IEEE J. Miniaturization Air Space Syst.
Aims & Scope
The IEEE Journal on Miniaturization for Air and Space Systems (J-MASS) is a new technical journal devoted to covering the rapidly evolving field of small air and space systems such as drones and small satellites.
These platforms offer new, low-cost ways to accomplish a wide range of sensing, measurement, control, and communication functions for applications ranging from agriculture to land use and ocean surveys.
Rowan University MemSat in NASA Clean Room for Testing There is tremendous growth in the numbers, complexity, and sophistication of highly miniaturized airborne and spaceborne systems.
These small systems include components, modules, sensors and associated instrumentation, control, communications, power, and guidance/propulsion systems, among many others.
The common denominator is the drive to decrease the size, increase the capability, decrease the power consumption, and lower the cost of these systems.
This publication will address the needs of the community of developers, systems architects, and users of highly miniaturized airborne and spaceborne systems and components.
Developers of these small, low-cost instrumentation, sensor, control, communication, and propulsion modules, subsystems, and systems will have a forum in which to share their work with the wider community and further spur additional research, development, and commercialization.
View Aims & ScopeMetrics & Ranking
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 0.636 |
Quartile
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | Q2 |
h-index
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 15 |
Journal Rank
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 9071 |
Journal Citation Indicator
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 379 |
Abstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Engineering, Materials Science and Social Sciences, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.