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This volume is the eighth of a well-established series devoted to
inelastic light scattering by solids, both as a physical effect and
as a spectroscopic technique. It appears jointly with volume VII
and can be considered to be its continuation. Emphasis is placed on
fullerenes, Raman spectroscopy of semiconductors, surfaces, and
interfaces, and coherent phonons. A survey of some of the progress
in other aspects of Raman spectroscopy, in particular in the field
of semiconductor nanostructures including the fractional quantum
Hall effect, and in Raman spectroscopy of isotopically modified
crystals rounds up the description of the present status of the
field. It will be useful to advanced students and to all
researchers who apply Raman spectroscopy in their work.
This is the sixth volume of a well-established and popular series
in which expert practitioners discuss topical aspects of light
scattering in solids. This volume discusses recent results of Raman
spectroscopy of high Tc superconductors, organic polymers, rare
earth compounds, semimagnetic superconductors, and silver halides,
as well as developments in the rapidly growing field of
time-resolved Raman spectroscopy. Emphasis is placed on obtaining
information about elementary excitations, the basic properties of
materials, and the use of Raman spectroscopy as an analytical tool.
This volume may be regarded as an encyclopedia of condensed matter
physics from the viewpoint of the Raman spectroscopist. It will be
useful to advanced students and to all researchers who apply Raman
spectroscopy in their work.
This volume is the eighth of a well-established series devoted to
inelastic light scattering by solids, both as a physical effect and
as a spectroscopic technique. It appears jointly with volume VII
and can be considered to be its continuation. Emphasis is placed on
fullerenes, Raman spectroscopy of semiconductors, surfaces, and
interfaces, and coherent phonons. A survey of some of the progress
in other aspects of Raman spectroscopy, in particular in the field
of semiconductor nanostructures including the fractional quantum
Hall effect, and in Raman spectroscopy of isotopically modified
crystals rounds up the description of the present status of the
field. It will be useful to advanced students and to all
researchers who apply Raman spectroscopy in their work.
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