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New textbooks at all levels of chemistry appear with great
regularity. Some fields like basic biochemistry, organic reaction
mechanisms, and chemical thermody namics are well represented by
many excellent texts, and new or revised editions are published
sufficiently often to keep up with progress in research. However,
some areas of chemistry, especially many of those taught at the
graduate level, suffer from a real lack of up-to-date textbooks.
The most serious needs occur in fields that are rapidly changing.
Textbooks in these subjects usually have to be written by
scientists actually involved in the research which is advancing the
field. It is not often easy to persuade such individuals to set
time aside to help spread the knowledge they have accumulated. Our
goal, in this series, is to pinpoint areas of chemistry where
recent progress has outpaced what is covered in any available
textbooks, and then seek out and persuade experts in these fields
to produce relatively concise but instructive introductions to
their fields. These should serve the needs of one semester or one
quarter graduate courses in chemistry and biochemistry. In some
cases, the availability of texts in active research areas should
help stimulate the creation of new courses. New York, New York
CHARLES R. CANTOR Preface This book is not a traditional quantum
chemistry textbook. Instead, it represents a concept that has
evolved from teaching graduate courses in quantum chemistry over a
number of years, and encountering students with diverse
backgrounds."
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