|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Atomic and Molecular Photoabsorption: Partial Cross Sections is a
companion work to Joseph Berkowitz's earlier work, Atomic and
Molecular Photoabsorption: Absolute Total Cross Sections, published
with Academic Press in 2002. In this work Joseph Berkowitz selected
the "best" absolute partial cross sections for the same species as
included in the companion work. A contrast, however, is that
photoabsorption measurements, being of order I/Io, do not require
the most intense light sources, whereas acquiring data on the
products of light interactions with gaseous matter (ions,
electrons, various coincidence measurements) has benefited
significantly with the arrival of second- and third-generation
synchrotrons. The newer devices have also extended the energy range
of the light sources to include the K-shells of the species
discussed here. The newer light sources encouraged experimentalists
to develop improved instrumentation. Thus, the determination of
partial cross sections continues to be an active field, with more
recent results in some cases superseding earlier ones. Where the
accuracy of the absolute partial cross sections is deemed
sufficient (less than five percent), numerical tables are included
in this new work. In other cases, the available data are presented
graphically.
The present volume contains contributions presented at the NATO
Advanced Study Institute on Molecular Ions held on the island of
Kos, Greece, from September 30 to October 10, 1980. The meeting was
attended by some 60 participants from 15 different countries. It
was the first meeting devoted exclusively to the topic of molecular
ions. Its vitality derived from bringing together experts and
students from a wide variety of disciplines, whose studies bear
upon the structure of molecular ions. The aim of the meeting was to
assemble these scientists, representing many countries in Europe
and North America, to discuss the advances and capabilities of the
various experimental and theoretical approaches and to point out un
solved problems and directions for future research. The format, in
volving lecturers and students, served as a tutorial. Molecular
ions play an important role in very diverse fields of nature such
as reactions in the ionosphere, the processes of forma tion of
molecules in dense interstellar clouds, and the magnetohydro
dynamics of plasmas used for energy generation. Our understanding
of the properties of molecular ions, their electronic and geometric
structures, has been developing from a variety of sources, as far
removed as tickling ions with radiofre quency radiation and
smashing them apart at relativistic energies. Various laser
techniques are described, and the queen of structural
determination, spectroscopy, is well represented. On the instrumen
tal side, older techniques have been perfected and new methods have
evolved."
|
|