Navigating Reference and Related-Article Links
Using A "Second Browser Window"
General Information
Navigating
reference links and
related-article
links in APS online journals may be made more efficient
if the user opts to load documents targeted by such links
into a "second" browser window. This will allow the user to maintain
two views, for example: (1) the first, or "parent," window
containing the abstract whose reference section is being navigated and (2) the "child"
window containing the initial target of the first
reference link followed as well as those of any successive
links followed.
This method can be used when following any of
the material so-linked; that is, cross-journal links in reference
sections, links to editorially related articles, links to articles
that cite the article currently in view, and links to external
databases. (Full descriptions of all of these linked items can
be found by following the two links appearing directly above.)
How to Open a New Browser Window
GENERAL NOTE: To access the "menu" for opening a second browser
window, PC/UNIX users must place the cursor over the link
to be loaded into the new window and click on the right-hand
mouse button; Mac users must place the cursor over the link
and click and hold the mouse button until the menu appears.
Proceed as follows:
- Netscape and MSIE (all platforms):
- Step 1: Position the cursor over the link you wish to
follow and load into a second browser.
- Step 2: Use the mouse to "activate" the menu.
- Step 3: Select Open in New Window or
Open Link in New Window (wording may vary between platforms
and/or versions of browsers).
- Step 4: The target of the link will be loaded into
the second browser.
The following example illustrates what a user would see
in most browsers (the screen capture depicts
a reference section viewed using Netscape 4.x for
Windows95) after following steps 1 3:

In this example, the user has opted to follow the [online] reference link
appearing in Ref. 2 and load the target document into
a new browser by selecting "Open in New Window" from
the menu.
The user's desktop would then contain the "parent" browser window
(containing the abstract initially viewed) and a second ("child") browser
window (containing the document targeted by the reference
link). Any successive links that the user chose to follow from the child
window would load in the child window. In this way,
users can generally use the parent window as the "anchor" for
whatever "trail" of reference links they chose to follow via the
child window.