Author Guidelines

  1. ASET is a periodical scientific research in the field of applied sciences, engineering and technologies. It accepts manuscript in critical literature review as well as original research article. Publication schedule of J. ASET is twice a year, they are June and December issues.
    General guidelines:
  2. The manuscript must be original, no plagiarism, and has never been published nor under consideration in other scientific journal.
  3. Articles are written by a recent Microsoft Word program, A4 size paper, page margins: top 3 cm, left 3 cm, bottom 2.5 cm, and right 2.5 cm, typed with 1,5 density spacing, font Tahoma 10, text format in single column.
  4. Please submit your manuscript file as a Microsoft Word extension Document (DOCX) or Rich Text Format (RTF).
  5. Abstract should be written in English.
  6. For submission, please login and submit your manuscript through the login link: http://www.journal.ic-star.org/index.php/jaset/login
  7. For June issue, we accept submission from January to April, and editing and revision process is scheduled in May. For December issue is from July to October. Editing and revision process is scheduled in November.
  8. The manuscript can be accepted without repair, refurbishment accepted, or rejected, and a rejected article is not returned unless requested by the author.
  9. Article template can be found in this link Template_J ASET 062020.doc - Google Drive or you may also access the example of a copyedit article in the link https://s.id/Article_JASEThttps://s.id/1f45Bhttps://s.id/1f45Bhttps://s.id/1f45Bhttps://s.id/1f45B

Manuscript Structure:

  1. The length of the manuscript of is no more than 5,000-10,000 words or about 4-15 pages.
  2. Manuscript should be written in a systematical way and by the following provisions.
  3. Title written in a concise and informative typed in Tahoma font of 24pt, maximum 20 words (single-spaced). Title should reflect the substance of the variables described in the article body.
  4. Name of Author: written using Tahoma font of 10pt, without salutation. The author can be an individual or a team.
  5. Affiliation: information should be detailed name of the institution and complete address including department, street, city, postal code, and country name.
  6. E-mail address for corresponding author is obligatory.
  7. Abstract should be written using Tahoma 10pt font that contains 200-350 words, in a single-spaced and one paragraph.
  8. Abstract of a review article consists of a discussion of the core issues and substantially, while for an original article consists of goals, methods, and results.
  9. Key words: terms that reflect the essence of the concept within the scope of the problem may consist of 3-7 terms.

Body of manuscript:

  1. Original Article consists of an INTRODUCTION, MATERIALS AND METHODS, RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS and CONCLUSIONS, ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS (IF ANY), and REFERENCES.
  2. Review Article consists of an INTRODUCTION (preliminary scientific study) that shows the problems and framework of analysis, sub-subtitle that contains the ALL SCIENTIFIC CONCER, CONCLUSIONS, ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS (IF ANY), and REFERENCES.

Reference styles:

  1. Scientific Journals

[1] J. U. Duncombe, “Infrared navigation—Part I: An assessment of feasibility (Periodical style),” IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol. 11, pp. 34–39, Jan. 1959.

[2] E. H. Miller, “A note on reflector arrays (Periodical style—Accepted for publication),” IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., to be published.

[3] J. Wang, “Fundamentals of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers arrays (Periodical style—Submitted for publication),” IEEE J. Quantum Electron., submitted for publication.

  1. Proceedings:

[4] S. P. Bingulac, “On the compatibility of adaptive controllers,” in Proc. 4th Annu. Allerton Conf. Circuits and Systems Theory,New York, 1994, pp. 8–16.

  1. Thesis and Dissertation:

[5] J. Williams, “Narrow-band analyzer (Thesis or Dissertation style),” Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect.Eng.,HarvardUniv.,Cambridge,MA, 1993.

  1. Books:

[6] G. O. Young, “Synthetic structure of industrial plastics,” in Plastics, 2nd ed. vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed.New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.

[7] W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems (Book style). Belmont,CA:Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.

  1. Patents and Standards:

[8] J. P. Wilkinson, “Nonlinear resonant circuit devices,” U.S. Patent 3 624 12, July 16, 1990.

[9] IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems, IEEE Standard 308, 1969.

  1. Internet resources:

[10] R. J. Vidmar. (1992, August). On the use of atmospheric plasmas as electromagnetic reflectors (Online Source Style). IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. [Online]. 21(3). pp. 876–880. Available: http://www.halcyon.com/ pub/journals/21ps03-vidmar