Can I publish it in NASA?
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NASA is not a physics review journal. It is an organization. They have internal journals and reviews that they publish, but that would be what they publish internally. NASA scientists publish outside NASA - in such peer-reviewed journals as:
Physical Review (see source)
Annual Review of Astronomy & Astrophysics (see source) (note - this review would not be a first-source publisher - but they might recommend where you could publish original work)
The Astronomical Review (see source)
Quite honestly though, if you have done actual research at a level worthy of publication, it would be nearly impossible for you to be unaware of numerous peer-reviewed journals within your field where you could submit for publication. And you would be aware that submitting for publication is no guarantee that it *is* published, as it needs to be original, worthy, and pass the peer-review..
But on the *extremely* unlikely chance that you are a lone worker, without access to a university Physics library or Physics department, but you have been working at a academic level that would merit publication, then I wish you good luck.
Physical Review (see source)
Annual Review of Astronomy & Astrophysics (see source) (note - this review would not be a first-source publisher - but they might recommend where you could publish original work)
The Astronomical Review (see source)
Quite honestly though, if you have done actual research at a level worthy of publication, it would be nearly impossible for you to be unaware of numerous peer-reviewed journals within your field where you could submit for publication. And you would be aware that submitting for publication is no guarantee that it *is* published, as it needs to be original, worthy, and pass the peer-review..
But on the *extremely* unlikely chance that you are a lone worker, without access to a university Physics library or Physics department, but you have been working at a academic level that would merit publication, then I wish you good luck.
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NASA is government agency, not a journal. If you want to publish an article, you need to submit it to a journal in the field. Popular ones are the Astrophysical Journal, the Astronomical Journal, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, and Astronomy & Astrophysics. Which one you submit to depends on where you live and what topic the paper covers. You need to go to the websites of these journals, format your paper in the necessary format, and submit it electronically.
But frankly, the fact that you had to ask does not bode well. Normally people submit papers to journals that they referenced in their papers. Which means either you didn't realize that (so you haven't done any research before and don't have a research adviser) or you didn't reference anything (no change of being accepted to a journal). It's pretty much impossible these days to do anything very original (and it needs to be original work to be published) with no background in the field, no collaborators, and without having read what's already been done.
But frankly, the fact that you had to ask does not bode well. Normally people submit papers to journals that they referenced in their papers. Which means either you didn't realize that (so you haven't done any research before and don't have a research adviser) or you didn't reference anything (no change of being accepted to a journal). It's pretty much impossible these days to do anything very original (and it needs to be original work to be published) with no background in the field, no collaborators, and without having read what's already been done.
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If you could already compose papers that are within strict regulations, then you would likely already know that NASA is NOT a peer reviewed journal.