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This volume is the first of a set of two which contain the invited
lectures given at the international seminar of the same title held
at the Centre de Mecanique Ondulatoire Appliquee du Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris (France) from October 1983 to
May 1985. They are intended to provide a survey of topics of
current interest relative to the structure and the dynamics of
molecular systems. The papers have been selected on the basis of
their relevance to the following four topics: i) molecular
conformations and transformations; ii) molecular relaxation and
motion; iii) charge, spin and momentum distributions in molecular
solids; iv) collective phenomena in condensed matter. The first
volume deals f)1ostly with the first two topics, the second volume
mostly with the last two. Each volume consists of about fifteen
self contained, reference contributions covering recent
achievements in active branches of molecular physics and physical
chemistry. The first four papers of the present volume deal with
theoretical aspects of structure and reactivity problems, with
particular attention being paid to topology considerations, which
have joined symmetry con siderations as an important tool in
approaching chemistry problems. The treatment of nuclear
probability density distributions is performed on a model basis for
a simple system, even though it has come to the attention of
theoreticians through experimental results for complex systems."
This volume is the first of a set of two which contain the invited
lectures given at the international seminar of the same title held
at the Centre de Mecanique Ondulatoire Appliquee du Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris (France) from October 1983 to
May 1985. They are intended to provide a survey of topics of
current interest relative to the structure and the dynamics of
molecular systems. The papers have been selected on the basis of
their relevance to the following four topics: i) molecular
conformations and transformations; ii) molecular relaxation and
motion; iii) charge, spin and momentum distributions in molecular
solids; iv) collective phenomena in condensed matter. The first
volume deals f)1ostly with the first two topics, the second volume
mostly with the last two. Each volume consists of about fifteen
self contained, reference contributions covering recent
achievements in active branches of molecular physics and physical
chemistry. The first four papers of the present volume deal with
theoretical aspects of structure and reactivity problems, with
particular attention being paid to topology considerations, which
have joined symmetry con siderations as an important tool in
approaching chemistry problems. The treatment of nuclear
probability density distributions is performed on a model basis for
a simple system, even though it has come to the attention of
theoreticians through experimental results for complex systems."
This volume is the second of a set of two which contain 28 selected
from the l. j. O invited lectures given at the internatim;al
seminar of the same title held at the Centre de Mecanique
Ondulatoire Appliquee du Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique in Paris (France) from October 1983 to May 1985. They
are intended to provide a survey of topics of current interest
relative to the structure and the dynamics of molecular systems.
The papers have been selected on the basis of their relevance to
the following four topics: i) molecular conformations and
transformations; H) molecular relaxation and motion; iii) charge,
spin and momentum distributions and intermolecular interactions;
iv) collective phenomena in condensed matter. The first volume
deals mostly with the first two topics, the second volume mostly
with the last two. The two volumes consist of an approximately
equal number of self-con tained, reference contributions covering
recent achievements in active branches of molecular physics and
physical chemistry. The first two papers of the present volume deal
with theoretical aspects of intermolecular interactions: the first
paper with the physical origin of the so-called non-exchange
molecular terms, a complete deriva tion of which is given using
Rayleigh-Schrodinger second-order perturba tion theory; the second
paper with the symmetry analysis of the effects of interactions
between rigid molecules and crystal environments, using the
isodynamic-group theoretical approach devised by Altmann for non
rigid systems."
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