If you already have the title and abstract for your article, you can use the following tools from Elsevier and Springer to help you pick a right journal among those that belong to the respective publisher
http://journalfinder.elsevier.com
http://journalsuggester.springer.com
The output of these tools shows inter alia average article processing times and impact factors of the journals and, if I recall correctly, also publication fees and open access fees. In many journals you can publish free of charge if you do NOT make your article open access (i.e. it is available only to journal subscribers), but this should be checked for each journal separately.
Once you make a short list of potentially suitable journals, you can check whether they are covered by Scopus here
If you already have the title and abstract for your article, you can use the following tools from Elsevier and Springer to help you pick a right journal among those that belong to the respective publisher
http://journalfinder.elsevier.com
http://journalsuggester.springer.com
The output of these tools shows inter alia average article processing times and impact factors of the journals and, if I recall correctly, also publication fees and open access fees. In many journals you can publish free of charge if you do NOT make your article open access (i.e. it is available only to journal subscribers), but this should be checked for each journal separately.
Once you make a short list of potentially suitable journals, you can check whether they are covered by Scopus here
Unfortunately, the Journal Finder page is giving mostly inaccurate results regarding the review period, this by a real test, I did it myself using many cases, Journal finder provides the estimated period of a review for x journal is 4 weeks, but the real period as an average exceeds 28 weeks, this is what I have found.
Thanks for this information, could you tell me which of these journal ( in applied Mathematics and statistics or applied science ) is faster in review processing?
One way is to visit these two websites of springer and Elsevier, the biggest two publishers. They have an option to find a suitable journal to your paper.
You just enter the title of your paper, the abstract, and the discipline of your research. The website will generate a number of journals that match your paper. You can find how long each journal takes for review, and the rank of each journal as well.