|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The last few years have seen some remarkable advances in the
understanding of atomic phenomena. It is now possible to isolate
atomic systems in traps, measure in coincidence the fragments of
collision processes, routinely produce, and study multicharged
ions. One can look at bulk matter in such a way that the
fundamental atomic character is clearly evident and work has begun
to tease out the properties of anti matter. The papers in this book
reflect many aspects of modem Atomic Physics. They correspond to
the invited talks at a conference dedicated to the study of "New
Directions in Atomic Physics," which took place in Magdalene
College, Cambridge in July of 1998. The meeting was designed as a
way of taking stock of what has been achieved and, it was hoped, as
a means of stimulating new research in new areas, along new lines.
Consequently, an effort was made to touch on as many directions as
we could in the four days of the meeting. We included some talks
which overviewed whole subfields, as well as quite a large number
of research contributions. There is a unity to Physics and we tried
to avoid any artificial division between theory and experiment. We
had roughly the same number of talks from those who are primarily
concerned with making measurements, and from those who spend their
lives trying to develop the theory to describe the experiments."
The last few years have seen some remarkable advances in the
understanding of atomic phenomena. It is now possible to isolate
atomic systems in traps, measure in coincidence the fragments of
collision processes, routinely produce, and study multicharged
ions. One can look at bulk matter in such a way that the
fundamental atomic character is clearly evident and work has begun
to tease out the properties of anti matter. The papers in this book
reflect many aspects of modem Atomic Physics. They correspond to
the invited talks at a conference dedicated to the study of "New
Directions in Atomic Physics," which took place in Magdalene
College, Cambridge in July of 1998. The meeting was designed as a
way of taking stock of what has been achieved and, it was hoped, as
a means of stimulating new research in new areas, along new lines.
Consequently, an effort was made to touch on as many directions as
we could in the four days of the meeting. We included some talks
which overviewed whole subfields, as well as quite a large number
of research contributions. There is a unity to Physics and we tried
to avoid any artificial division between theory and experiment. We
had roughly the same number of talks from those who are primarily
concerned with making measurements, and from those who spend their
lives trying to develop the theory to describe the experiments.
|
|