American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
References
The following pages are intended to provide examples of the different reference types, as used in the AIAA Style Guide.
When using the Word version of this template to enter references, select the “references” style from the drop-down style menu to
automatically format your references. If you are using a print or PDF version of this document, all references should be in 9-point
font, with reference numbers inserted in superscript immediately before the corresponding reference. You are not required to
indicate the type of reference; different types are shown here for illustrative purposes only.
Periodicals
1
Vatistas, G. H., Lin, S., and Kwok, C. K., “Reverse Flow Radius in Vortex Chambers,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 24, No. 11,
1986, pp. 1872, 1873.
2
Dornheim, M. A., “Planetary Flight Surge Faces Budget Realities,” Aviation Week and Space Technology, Vol. 145, No. 24,
9 Dec. 1996, pp. 44-46.
3
Terster, W., “NASA Considers Switch to Delta 2,” Space News, Vol. 8, No. 2, 13-19 Jan. 1997, pp., 1, 18.
All of the preceding information is required. The journal issue number (“No. 11” in Ref. 1) is preferred, but the month (Nov.)
can be substituted if the issue number is not available. Use the complete date for daily and weekly publications. Transactions
follow the same style as other journals; if punctuation is necessary, use a colon to separate the transactions title from the journal
title.
Books
4
Peyret, R., and Taylor, T. D., Computational Methods in Fluid Flow, 2
nd
ed., Springer-Verlag, New York, 1983, Chaps. 7,
14.
5
Oates, G. C. (ed.), Aerothermodynamics of Gas Turbine and Rocket Propulsion, AIAA Education Series, AIAA, New York,
1984, pp. 19, 136.
6
Volpe, R., “Techniques for Collision Prevention, Impact Stability, and Force Control by Space Manipulators,” Teleoperation
and Robotics in Space, edited by S. B. Skaar and C. F. Ruoff, Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics, AIAA, Washington, DC,
1994, pp. 175-212.
Publisher, place, and date of publication are required for all books. No state or country is required for major cities: New
York, London, Moscow, etc. A differentiation must always be made between Cambridge, MA, and Cambridge, England, UK.
Note that series titles are in roman type.
Proceedings
7
Thompson, C. M., “Spacecraft Thermal Control, Design, and Operation,” AIAA Guidance, Navigation, and Control
Conference, CP849, Vol. 1, AIAA, Washington, DC, 1989, pp. 103-115
8
Chi, Y., (ed.), Fluid Mechanics Proceedings, SP-255, NASA, 1993.
9
Morris, J. D. “Convective Heat Transfer in Radially Rotating Ducts,” Proceedings of the Annual Heat Transfer Conference,
edited by B. Corbell, Vol. 1, Inst. Of Mechanical Engineering, New York, 1992, pp. 227-234.
At a minimum, proceedings must have the same information as other book references: paper (chapter) and volume title, name
and location of publisher, editor (if applicable), and pages or chapters cited. Do not include paper numbers in proceedings
references, and delete the conference location so that it is not confused with the publisher’s location (which is mandatory, except
for government agencies). Frequently, CP or SP numbers (Conference Proceedings or Symposium Proceedings numbers) are also
given. These elements are not necessary, but when provided, their places should be as shown in the preceding examples.
Reports, Theses, and Individual Papers
10
Chapman, G. T., and Tobak, M., “Nonlinear Problems in Flight Dynamics,” NASA TM-85940, 1984.
11
Steger, J. L., Jr., Nietubicz, C. J., and Heavey, J. E., “A General Curvilinear Grid Generation Program for Projectile
Configurations,” U.S. Army Ballistic Research Lab., Rept. ARBRL-MR03142, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD, Oct. 1981.
12
Tseng, K., “Nonlinear Green’s Function Method for Transonic Potential Flow,” Ph.D. Dissertation, Aeronautics and
Astronautics Dept., Boston Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1983.
Government agency reports do not require locations. For reports such as NASA TM-85940, neither insert nor delete dashes;
leave them as provided by the author. Place of publication should be given, although it is not mandatory, for military and
company reports. Always include a city and state for universities. Papers need only the name of the sponsor; neither the sponsor’s
location nor the conference name and location are required. Do not confuse proceedings references with conference papers.
Electronic Publications
CD-ROM publications and regularly issued, dated electronic journals are permitted as references. Archived data sets also
may be referenced as long as the material is openly accessible and the repository is committed to archiving the data indefinitely.
References to electronic data available only from personal Web sites or commercial, academic, or government ones where there
is no commitment to archiving the data are not permitted (see Private Communications and Web sites).