Seventeenth Algorithmic Number Theory Symposium
ANTS XVII
Bernoulli Institute
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Netherlands
July 6–10, 2026


Call for Papers

The Algorithmic Number Theory Symposium (ANTS), held every two years since 1994, is an international forum for new research in computational number theory. It is devoted to algorithmic aspects of number theory, including elementary number theory, algebraic number theory, analytic number theory, geometry of numbers, arithmetic algebraic geometry, finite fields, and cryptography.

This is a call for papers for an associated proceedings volume. We strongly encourage anyone with research related to the topics above to submit a paper.

For each accepted submission, at least one author must present the work at the conference. More information concerning funding will be posted on the website in 2026 as it becomes available.

Authors are welcome to post their submissions on preprint servers such as arXiv, HAL, and the cryptology ePrint archive; but papers submitted to ANTS XVII should not be submitted for publication elsewhere.

ANTS aims to foster diversity; we particularly encourage submissions from women and underrepresented minorities who have projects in the general scope of this conference.

Following the format of recent ANTS conferences, the conference proceedings will be published after the conference. As with ANTS XV and ANTS XVI, the proceedings volume for ANTS XVII will be published in a topical collection in Research in Number Theory by Springer. Papers of the highest quality are selected by the program committee, after a rigorous peer-review process. Preliminary versions of the papers are available during the conference, and final versions are submitted after the conference. In addition, any associated code or data should be placed in a publicly available repository such as GitHub, GitLab or Zenodo to be available to the reviewers (to help improve the quality, accessibility, re-usability, and reproducibility of the code and data). The MaRDI project will assist with code reviews along these tips and guidelines for writing and reviewing mathematical software.

Papers should be prepared in latex formatted using the amsart document class with default margins, font size (10pt), line spacing and have at most 20 pages, excluding references. A specific document class for Research in Number Theory is not yet available and might be provided later.


Submission

The deadline for paper submissions is January 17, 2026.

Further details about the submission procedure will be provided here.


Review Timeline