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The Fourth USA-USSR Symposium. on The Physics of Optical Phenomena
and Their Use as Probes of Matter, was held in Irvine, California,
January 23-27, 1990. Participating in the Symposium were 22
scientists from the USSR and 29 from the USA. In addition, to
provide an international dimension to this Symposium without,
however, compromising significantly its essentially binational
character, 7 non-US and non-USSR scientists were invited to take
part in it. The present volume is the proceedings of that
Symposium, and contains all manuscripts received prior to August 1,
1990, representing. scientific contributions presented. A few
manuscripts were not received, but for completeness the
corresponding abstract is printed.. Three previous USA/USSR
Binational Symposia on related topics have been held, viz. "Theory
of Light Scattering in Condensed Matter" (Moscow, 1975), "Light
Scattering in Solids" (New York, 1979), and "Laser Optics of
Condensed Matter" (Leningrad, 1987). These meetings were evaluated
by the participants as highly successful and provided invaluable
oppor tunities for researchers to exchange information and to
initiate colla borative work which led to research visits by US
physicist to Soviet laboratories, and vice versa, and which
continue to the present day.
In recent years substantial progress has been made in the detection
of surface phonons owing to considerable improvements in inelastic
rare gas scattering tech niques and electron energy loss
spectroscopy. With these methods it has become possible to measure
surface vibrations in a wide energy range for all wave vectors in
the two-dimensional Brillouin zone and thus to deduce the complete
surface phonon dispersion curves. Inelastic atomic beam scattering
and electron energy loss spectroscopy have started to play a role
in the study of surface phonons similar to the one played by
inelastic neutron scattering in the investigation of bulk phonons
in the last thirty years. Detailed comparison between experimen tal
results and theoretical studies of inelastic surface scattering and
of surface phonons has now become feasible. It is therefore
possible to test and to improve the details of interaction models
which have been worked out theoretically in the last few decades.
At this point we felt that a concise, coherent and self-contained
guide to the rapidly growing field of surface phonons was needed."
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