AAS journals will shift to fully open access

The Event Horizon Telescope collaboration described its historic image of a black hole in 2019 in a series of open-access papers in Astrophysical Journal Letters. Beginning in January, all content in Astrophysical Journal Letters and other AAS journals will be freely available for all to read.
Andrew Grant; source: EHT collaboration et al., Astrophys. J. Lett. 875, L1 (2019)
The American Astronomical Society’s entire portfolio of journals will become fully open access (OA) on 1 January 2022, the society announced earlier this month. The Astronomical Journal, Astrophysical Journal, Astrophysical Journal Letters, and Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series will join the Planetary Science Journal, the OA journal that AAS launched last year, and the OA and non-peer-reviewed Research Notes of the AAS.
The move ensures free access for the astronomy community and the general public to all content past and present—known as gold OA
However, the shift to OA comes at the cost of higher fees to publish in those journals. In abandoning the traditional subscription model, AAS is passing on publication expenses now covered by institutional libraries to researchers, including many who work with limited funding. The society says it is striving to ensure equity in both publishing and reading by significantly bolstering its fee waiver program for authors.
All submissions after 31 December will be subject to the new author charges. The fees
Angela Cochran, vice president of publishing at the American Society of Clinical Oncology and past president of the Society for Scholarly Publishing, says those rates are reasonable for gold OA journals. “Below $3000 is pretty competitive right now,” she says.
Paying a fee to publish won’t be new for authors who have placed their work in the journals of the nonprofit society publisher. Today subscriptions account for only about a third of AAS’s journal revenue. The rest comes from author fees administered by the society’s four subscription journals. Known as article publication charges

A comparison of the author fees in 2021 and 2022 to publish in four AAS journals. The rates and tiers are based on the number of quanta, a measure of the words, figures, and other content in the paper.
Other astronomy journals such as Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Astronomy & Astrophysics, and Nature Astronomy rely largely on subscription revenue, so most of their papers are held behind a paywall. Many authors in those journals publish under the traditional model, and it costs them little or nothing to do so—Monthly Notices and the Nature journals have no additional fees, whereas Astronomy & Astrophysics charges about $120 per page
To aid researchers who have trouble affording the author charges, AAS is increasing its fee waiver budget 10-fold, says chief publishing officer Julie Steffen. The editor-in-chief of AAS journals, Ethan Vishniac, will have the discretion to cover some or all of the author fee based on financial need, though there is no option for a complete fee waiver for the rapid-communication Astrophysical Journal Letters. Vishniac says that the society’s evaluation for financial support will be separate from the scientific review of a paper. He adds that AAS is amenable to researchers who apply for a partial waiver because they had budgeted for the previous rates.
Many astronomers, including Jason Wright of the Pennsylvania State University, say they are happy to see their work and others’ freely available. Wright notes that his university’s library system doesn’t have access to Nature Astronomy, so he appreciates the free-to-read philosophy of the AAS journals.
Other members of the astronomy community praise AAS’s embrace of OA but not its strategy of relying on the journals’ contributors to achieve it. With Plan S and other OA edicts hastening a paradigm shift in scientific publishing, AAS missed out on an opportunity to make the process even more equitable, says Uta Grothkopf, who heads the European Southern Observatory’s Library and Information Centre in Garching, Germany, and has advised and participated in an OA working group for Astronomy & Astrophysics. She says that although many astronomers in the US are accustomed to author charges and paying for them with grant money, that’s not the case for many of their peers in Europe and the rest of the world. “It might be easier for those users to adapt because they’re used to it,” she says. “But that doesn’t mean it’s good.”
Grothkopf says AAS could have pursued models such as Subscribe to Open (S2O), in which libraries pledge to continue paying a subscription fee and, in return, publishers make content fully OA. Several journals from the nonprofit publisher Annual Reviews have adopted the S2O funding scheme
Among the few people outside AAS who learned the news in advance of the 1 September announcement, according to Steffen, were officials at NASA and NSF, which fund a large percentage of the journals’ US-based authors. The agencies were “extremely supportive,” she says, and indicated that the journals’ author fees would be allowable expenses for most grants.
Considering AAS’s complete jump to OA and its efforts to capitalize on its close connections to major funding agencies, other society publishers will be monitoring AAS’s progress, Cochran says. “As a publisher of society journals, I encourage experimentation that the rest of us can learn from.”
Editor’s note, 17 September: The article was updated to include Uta Grothkopf’s connection to Astronomy & Astrophysics.
More about the Authors
Andrew Grant. agrant@aip.org