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The International Conference on Strongly Coupled Coulomb Systems
was held on the campus of Boston College in Newton, Massachusetts,
August 3-10, 1997. Although this conference was the first under a
new name, it was the continuation of a series of international
meetings on strongly coupled plasmas and other Coulomb systems that
started with the NATO Summer Institute on Strongly Coupled Plasmas,
almost exactly twenty years prior to this conference, in July of
1977 in Orleans la Source, France. Over the intervening period the
field of strongly coupled plasmas has developed vigorously. In the
1977 meeting the emphasis was on computer (Monte Carlo and
molecular dynamics) simulations which provided, for the first time,
insight into the rich and new physics of strongly coupled fully
ionizedplasmas. While theorists scrambled to provide a theoretical
underpinning for these results, there was also a dearth of real
experimental input to reinforce the computer simulations. Over the
past few years this situation has changed drastically and a variety
of direct experiments on classical, pure, strongly correlated
plasma systems (charged particle traps, dusty plasmas, electrons on
the surface of liquid helium, etc. ) have become available. Even
more importantly, entire new area of experimental interest in
condensed matter physics have opened up through developments in
nano-technology and the fabrication of low-dimensional systems,
where the physical behavior, in many ways, is similar to that in
classical plasmas. Strongly coupled plasma physics has always been
an interdisciplinaryactivity.
The International Conference on Strongly Coupled Coulomb Systems
was held on the campus of Boston College in Newton, Massachusetts,
August 3-10, 1997. Although this conference was the first under a
new name, it was the continuation of a series of international
meetings on strongly coupled plasmas and other Coulomb systems that
started with the NATO Summer Institute on Strongly Coupled Plasmas,
almost exactly twenty years prior to this conference, in July of
1977 in Orleans la Source, France. Over the intervening period the
field of strongly coupled plasmas has developed vigorously. In the
1977 meeting the emphasis was on computer (Monte Carlo and
molecular dynamics) simulations which provided, for the first time,
insight into the rich and new physics of strongly coupled fully
ionizedplasmas. While theorists scrambled to provide a theoretical
underpinning for these results, there was also a dearth of real
experimental input to reinforce the computer simulations. Over the
past few years this situation has changed drastically and a variety
of direct experiments on classical, pure, strongly correlated
plasma systems (charged particle traps, dusty plasmas, electrons on
the surface of liquid helium, etc. ) have become available. Even
more importantly, entire new area of experimental interest in
condensed matter physics have opened up through developments in
nano-technology and the fabrication of low-dimensional systems,
where the physical behavior, in many ways, is similar to that in
classical plasmas. Strongly coupled plasma physics has always been
an interdisciplinaryactivity.
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