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It is now ten years since it was first convincingly shown that
below 1 K the ther mal conductivity and the heat capacity of
amorphous solids behave in a way which is strikingly different to
that of crystalline solids. Since that time there has been a wide
variety of experimental and theoretical studies which have not only
defined and clarified the low temperature problem more closely, but
have also linked these differences between amorphous and
crystalline solids to those suggested by older acoustic and thermal
experiments (extending up to 100 K). The interest in this somewhat
restricted branch of physics lies to a considerable extent in the
fact that the differences were so unexpected. It might be thought
that as the tempera ture, probing frequency, or more generally the
energy decreases, a continuum de scription in which structural
differences between glass and crystal are concealed should become
more accurate. In a sense this is true, but it appears that there
exists in an amorphous solid a large density of additional
excitations which have no counterpart in normal crystals. This book
presents a survey of the wide range of experimental investigations
of these low energy excitations, together with a re view of the
various theoretical models put forward to explain their existence
and nature."
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