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Polarization and Correlation Phenomena in Atomic Collisions: A
Practical Theory Course bridges the gap between traditional courses
in quantum mechanics and practical investigations. The authors'
goal is to guide students in training their ability to perform
theoretical calculations of polarization and correlation
characteristics of various processes in atomic collisions. The book
provides a concise description of the density matrix and
statistical tensor formalism and presents a general approach to the
description of angular correlation and polarization phenomena. It
illustrates an application of the angular momentum technique to a
broad variety of atomic processes. The book contains derivations of
the most important expressions for observable quantities in
electron-atom and ion-atom scattering, including that for polarized
beams and/or polarized targets, in photo-induced processes,
autoionization and cascades of atomic transitions.
Spin-polarization and angular distributions of the reaction
products are described, including the angular correlations in
different types of coincidence measurements. The considered
processes exemplify the general approach and the number of examples
can be easily extended by a reader. The book supplies researchers,
both theoreticians and experimentalists with a collection of
helpful formulae and tables, and can serve as a reference book.
Based on a highly regarded course at Moscow State University and
elsewhere, the book provides real guidance on theoretical
calculations of practical use.
The main goal of this book is to elucidate what kind of experiment
must be performed in order to determine the full set of independent
parameters which can be extracted and calculated from theory, where
electrons, photons, atoms, ions, molecules, or molecular ions may
serve as the interacting constituents of matter. The feasibility of
such perfect' and-or `complete' experiments, providing the complete
quantum mechanical knowledge of the process, is associated with the
enormous potential of modern research techniques, both, in
experiment and theory. It is even difficult to overestimate the
role of theory in setting of the complete experiment, starting with
the fact that an experiment can be complete only within a certain
theoretical framework, and ending with the direct prescription of
what, and in what conditions should be measured to make the
experiment `complete'. The language of the related theory is the
language of quantum mechanical amplitudes and their relative
phases. This book captures the spirit of research in the direction
of the complete experiment in atomic and molecular physics,
considering some of the basic quantum processes: scattering, Auger
decay and photo-ionization. It includes a description of the
experimental methods used to realize, step by step, the complete
experiment up to the level of the amplitudes and phases. The
corresponding arsenal includes, beyond determining the total cross
section, the observation of angle and spin resolved quantities,
photon polarization and correlation parameters, measurements
applying coincidence techniques, preparing initially polarized
targets, and even more sophisticated methods. The `complete'
experiment is, until today, hardly to perform. Therefore, much
attention is paid to the results of state-of-the-art experiments
providing detailed information on the process, and their comparison
to the related theoretical approaches, just to mention relativistic
multi-configurational Dirac-Fock, convergent close-coupling,
Breit-Pauli R-matrix, or relativistic distorted wave approaches, as
well as Green's operator methods. This book has been written in
honor of Herbert Walther and his major contribution to the field
but even to stimulate advanced Bachelor and Master students by
demonstrating that obviously nowadays atomic and molecular
scattering physics yields and gives a much exciting appreciation
for further advancing the field.
The main goal of this book is to elucidate what kind of experiment
must be performed in order to determine the full set of independent
parameters which can be extracted and calculated from theory, where
electrons, photons, atoms, ions, molecules, or molecular ions may
serve as the interacting constituents of matter. The feasibility of
such perfect' and-or `complete' experiments, providing the complete
quantum mechanical knowledge of the process, is associated with the
enormous potential of modern research techniques, both, in
experiment and theory. It is even difficult to overestimate the
role of theory in setting of the complete experiment, starting with
the fact that an experiment can be complete only within a certain
theoretical framework, and ending with the direct prescription of
what, and in what conditions should be measured to make the
experiment `complete'. The language of the related theory is the
language of quantum mechanical amplitudes and their relative
phases. This book captures the spirit of research in the direction
of the complete experiment in atomic and molecular physics,
considering some of the basic quantum processes: scattering, Auger
decay and photo-ionization. It includes a description of the
experimental methods used to realize, step by step, the complete
experiment up to the level of the amplitudes and phases. The
corresponding arsenal includes, beyond determining the total cross
section, the observation of angle and spin resolved quantities,
photon polarization and correlation parameters, measurements
applying coincidence techniques, preparing initially polarized
targets, and even more sophisticated methods. The `complete'
experiment is, until today, hardly to perform. Therefore, much
attention is paid to the results of state-of-the-art experiments
providing detailed information on the process, and their comparison
to the related theoretical approaches, just to mention relativistic
multi-configurational Dirac-Fock, convergent close-coupling,
Breit-Pauli R-matrix, or relativistic distorted wave approaches, as
well as Green's operator methods. This book has been written in
honor of Herbert Walther and his major contribution to the field
but even to stimulate advanced Bachelor and Master students by
demonstrating that obviously nowadays atomic and molecular
scattering physics yields and gives a much exciting appreciation
for further advancing the field.
Polarization and Correlation Phenomena in Atomic Collisions: A
Practical Theory Course bridges the gap between traditional courses
in quantum mechanics and practical investigations. The authors'
goal is to guide students in training their ability to perform
theoretical calculations of polarization and correlation
characteristics of various processes in atomic collisions. The book
provides a concise description of the density matrix and
statistical tensor formalism and presents a general approach to the
description of angular correlation and polarization phenomena. It
illustrates an application of the angular momentum technique to a
broad variety of atomic processes. The book contains derivations of
the most important expressions for observable quantities in
electron-atom and ion-atom scattering, including that for polarized
beams and/or polarized targets, in photo-induced processes,
autoionization and cascades of atomic transitions.
Spin-polarization and angular distributions of the reaction
products are described, including the angular correlations in
different types of coincidence measurements. The considered
processes exemplify the general approach and the number of examples
can be easily extended by a reader. The book supplies researchers,
both theoreticians and experimentalists with a collection of
helpful formulae and tables, and can serve as a reference book.
Based on a highly regarded course at Moscow State University and
elsewhere, the book provides real guidance on theoretical
calculations of practical use.
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