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Physical Review Letters pre-submission review

Free readiness scan for Physical Review Letters.

High-impact physics research from fundamental theory to applications - fast.

Upload your manuscript and see the first desk-rejection risks, journal-fit verdict, and top reviewer objections calibrated for Physical Review Letters in about 1-2 minutes.

Impact factor

9.0

Acceptance

~7%

First decision

~30 days to first decision

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Used by 5,000+ researchers. Readiness, desk-screen risk, and the top blockers in about 90 seconds.

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Before you upload

Not used for model training. Your manuscript stays out of training data.

Deleted after analysis. The AI scan is a one-time processing flow.

No human reads the manuscript unless you separately choose expert review.

You can inspect a real sample report before paying for anything. The free preview is the low-friction first step.

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Free manuscript scan · Full report from $29

What Physical Review Letters editors screen for

The signals Physical Review Letters rewards before the first reviewer

The readiness scan checks your manuscript against these first.

Significant advance, not incremental progress

PRL publishes findings that shift understanding. Incremental improvements to existing experiments or tweaks to established theory get rejected. Show why your work is a genuine advance.

Clarity in explaining significance

Physics is broad. Your letter must explain why your finding matters beyond your specific subfield. Why should condensed matter physicists care if you're a particle physicist? Make that connection clear.

Rigorous experimental or theoretical methodology

If experimental: rigorous measurement technique with clear error analysis. If theoretical: rigorous math with proper derivations and assumptions clearly stated.

Common Physical Review Letters rejection patterns

Named failure modes the scan looks for

These are patterns Physical Review Letters editors flag in initial triage. The free preview surfaces when your manuscript shows them.

Pattern 1

Submitting incremental improvements as breakthroughs

If your work is 10% improvement over existing state-of-the-art, that's a good specialty journal paper, not a PRL paper. PRL wants 10x improvements or entirely new phenomena.

Pattern 2

Insufficient experimental rigor or error analysis

Physics reviewers are sophisticated about experimental methodology. If your error bars are huge or your experimental technique is questionable, they'll catch it.

Pattern 3

Unclear broader significance

If your finding only interests specialists in your narrow subdiscipline, PRL isn't the right venue. Explain why physicists across all areas should care.

Common questions about Physical Review Letters submissions

Does the scan understand Physical Review Letters's editorial standards?

The readiness scan is calibrated to Physical Review Letters's scope and review signals. It estimates desk-rejection risk against known triage patterns, flags where your manuscript sits against journal fit, and surfaces the specific reviewer objections most likely to come up.

How long does the Physical Review Letters scan take?

The free preview takes about 1-2 minutes once you upload. If you want the full diagnostic with verified citations and section-by-section critique, it is delivered as a DOCX in about 7 minutes.

Is my manuscript safe?

Yes. Uploads are encrypted in transit, not used to train any AI model, and deleted after analysis. No human reads your manuscript on the AI path.

Where can I read more about Physical Review Letters?

See the full Physical Review Letters submission guide for scope details, insider tips, and acceptance-rate context. Or see how the AI diagnostic works across all journals.

Find out before Physical Review Letters's editors do

Your reviewers will find these issues. The question is whether you find them first. Free preview in 1-2 minutes.

Start the free Physical Review Letters scan