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Relativistic effects are of major importance for understanding the properties of heavier atoms and molecules. Volumes I-III of Relativistic Theory of Atoms and Molecules constitute the only available bibliography on related calculations. In Volume III, 3792 new references covering 1993-1999 are added to the database. The material is characterized by an analysis of the respective papers. The volume gives the user a comprehensive bibliography on relativistic atomic and molecular calculations, including studies on the Dirac equation and related solid-state work.
Relativistic effects are of major importance for understan- ding the properties of heavier atoms and molecules. This book is still the only comprehensive bibliography on related calculations. The material is organized by subject into ta- bles containing a concise characterization. Together with Volume I (Lecture Notes in Chemistry Vol. 41, ISBN 3-540-17167-3) the literature until 1992 is now covered and 6577 references, with titles, are given in the two books. The book will provide aconvenient reference for theoretical chemists and atomic and molecular physicists interested in the properties of heavier elements. Contents: Introduction - One-particle problems - Quantum electrodynamical effects - Multielectron atoms: methods - Multielectron atoms: results - Symmetry - Molecular calcula- tions - Solid-state theory - Relativistic effects and heavy- element chemistry - Corrections to Volume I - Some comments on notations and terminology - List of acronyms and symbols - Bibliography.
The project that finally led to this book, was originally started with Dr. Jean-Paul Desclaux. It is a pleasure to thank hirn for a fruitful collaboration stretching over more than a decade. While accepting the responsibility for any remaining errors and omissions, I wish to acknowledge in particular the comments by Teijo Aberg, Viktor Flambaum, Burkhard Fricke, Franz Mark and Arne Rosen. The Bibliography was compiled using a Fortran program, written for the DEC 20 at the University of Turku by Matti Hotokka, and adap ted to the University of Helsinki Burroughs 7800 by Dage Sundholm. Harriet Bjornstrom did most of the typing and Kathe Ramsay cross checked the text against the Bibliography. Readers, interested in obtaining a Wordstar-readable, IBM PC compatible diskette file (about 520 kb on a two-sided diskette) of the Bibliography should contact the author Helsinki, 20 August, 1986 Pekka Pyykko CONTENTS 1. Introduction ................................................. 1 Table 1.1. Managraphs and ather general references ........... 2 2. One-particle problems ........................................ 5 2.1. Special relativity and the ald quantum theary ........... 5 2.2. On the Klein-Gardon equation ............................ 5 2.3. The Dirac equation ...................................... 6 Table 2.l. The Dirac equation: interpretative studies, symmetry properties and non-relativistic limits ............ 7 Table 2.2. The Dirac equation: further transformations ...... 13 Table 2.3. The Dirac equation: solutions for hydrogen-like systems. . ........................................ 1 6 Table 2.4. The Dirac equations: solutions for various n- coulomb fields. . ................................. 21 Table 2.5. Relativistic virial theorems ..................... 26 3. Quantum electrodynamical effects ............................ 27 Table 3.1."
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