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The first part of this book overviews the physics of lasers and
describes some of the more common types of lasers and their
applications. Applications of lasers include CD/DVD players, laser
printers and fiber optic communication devices. Part II of this
book describes the phenomenon of Bose-Einstein condensation. The
experimental techniques used to create a Bose-Einstein condensate
provide an interesting and unconventional application of lasers;
that is, the cooling and confinement of a dilute gas at very low
temperature.
The transport of electric charge through most materials is well
described in terms of their electronic band structure. The present
book deals with two cases where the charge transport in a solid is
not described by the simple band structure picture of the solid.
These cases are related to the phenomena of the quantum Hall effect
and superconductivity. Part I of this book deals with the quantum
Hall effect, which is a consequence of the behavior of electrons in
solids when they are constrained to move in two dimensions. Part II
of the present volume describes the behavior of superconductors,
where electrons are bound together in Cooper pairs and travel
through a material without resistance.
The effect which now bears his name, was discovered in 1958 by
Rudolf Moessbauer at the Technical University of Munich. At first,
this appeared to be a phenomenon related to nuclear energy levels
that provided some information about excited state lifetimes and
quantum properties. However, it soon became apparent that
Moessbauer spectroscopy had applications in such diverse fields as
general relativity, solid state physics, chemistry, materials
science, biology, medical physics, archeology and art. It is the
extreme sensitivity of the effect to the atomic environment around
the probe atom as well as the ability to apply the technique to
some interesting and important elements, most notably iron, that is
responsible for the Moessbauer effect's extensive use. The present
volume reviews the historical development of the Moessbauer effect,
the experimental details, the basic physics of hyperfine
interactions and some of the numerous applications of Moessbauer
effect spectroscopy.
Our understanding of subatomic particles developed over many years,
although a clear picture of the different particles, their
interactions and their inter-relationships only emerged in the
latter part of the twentieth century. The first ""subatomic
particles"" to be investigated were those which exhibit readily
observable macroscopic behavior, specifically these are the photon,
which we observe as light and the electron, which is manifested as
electricity. The true nature of these particles, however, only
became clear within the last century or so. The development of the
Standard Model provided clarification of the way in which various
particles, specifically the hadrons, relate to one another and the
way in which their properties are determined by their structure.
The final piece, perhaps, of the final model, that is the means by
which some particles acquire mass, has just recently been clarified
with the observation of the Higgs boson. Since the 1970s it has
been known that the measured solar neutrino flux was inconsistent
with the flux predicted by solar models. The existence of neutrinos
with mass would allow for neutrino flavor oscillations and would
provide an explanation for this discrepancy. Only in the past few
years, has there been clear experimental evidence that neutrinos
have mass. The description of particle structure on the basis of
the Standard Model, along with recent discoveries concerning
neutrino properties, provides us with a comprehensive picture of
the properties of subatomic particles. Part I of the present book
provides an overview of the Standard Model of particle physics
including an overview of the discovery and properties of the Higgs
boson. Part II of the book summarizes the important investigations
into the physics of neutrinos and provides an overview of the
interpretation of these studies.
For many years, evidence suggested that all solid materials either
possessed a periodic crystal structure as proposed by the Braggs or
they were amorphous glasses with no long-range order. In the 1970s,
Roger Penrose hypothesized structures (Penrose tilings) with
long-range order which were not periodic. The existence of a solid
phase, known as a quasicrystal, that possessed the structure of a
three dimensional Penrose tiling, was demonstrated experimentally
in 1984 by Dan Shechtman and colleagues. Shechtman received the
2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery. The discovery and
description of quasicrystalline materials provided the first
concrete evidence that traditional crystals could be viewed as a
subset of a more general category of ordered materials. This book
introduces the diversity of structures that are now known to exist
in solids through a consideration of quasicrystals (Part I) and the
various structures of elemental carbon (Part II) and through an
analysis of their relationship to conventional crystal structures.
Both quasicrystals and the various allotropes of carbon are
excellent examples of how our understanding of the microstructure
of solids has progressed over the years beyond the concepts of
traditional crystallography.
In this invaluable book, the basic mathematical properties of the
golden ratio and its occurrence in the dimensions of two- and
three-dimensional figures with fivefold symmetry are discussed. In
addition, the generation of the Fibonacci series and generalized
Fibonacci series and their relationship to the golden ratio are
presented. These concepts are applied to algorithms for searching
and function minimization. The Fibonacci sequence is viewed as a
one-dimensional aperiodic, lattice and these ideas are extended to
two- and three-dimensional Penrose tilings and the concept of
incommensurate projections. The structural properties of aperiodic
crystals and the growth of certain biological organisms are
described in terms of Fibonacci sequences.
The first part of this book overviews the physics of lasers and
describes some of the more common types of lasers and their
applications. Applications of lasers include CD/DVD players, laser
printers and fiber optic communication devices. Part II of this
book describes the phenomenon of Bose-Einstein condensation. The
experimental techniques used to create a Bose-Einstein condensate
provide an interesting and unconventional application of lasers;
that is, the cooling and confinement of a dilute gas at very low
temperature.
Our understanding of subatomic particles developed over many years,
although a clear picture of the different particles, their
interactions and their inter-relationships only emerged in the
latter part of the twentieth century. The first "subatomic
particles" to be investigated were those which exhibit readily
observable macroscopic behavior, specifically these are the photon,
which we observe as light and the electron, which is manifested as
electricity. The true nature of these particles, however, only
became clear within the last century or so. The development of the
Standard Model provided clarification of the way in which various
particles, specifically the hadrons, relate to one another and the
way in which their properties are determined by their structure.
The final piece, perhaps, of the final model, that is the means by
which some particles acquire mass, has just recently been clarified
with the observation of the Higgs boson. Since the 1970s it has
been known that the measured solar neutrino flux was inconsistent
with the flux predicted by solar models. The existence of neutrinos
with mass would allow for neutrino flavor oscillations and would
provide an explanation for this discrepancy. Only in the past few
years, has there been clear experimental evidence that neutrinos
have mass. The description of particle structure on the basis of
the Standard Model, along with recent discoveries concerning
neutrino properties, provides us with a comprehensive picture of
the properties of subatomic particles. Part I of the present book
provides an overview of the Standard Model of particle physics
including an overview of the discovery and properties of the Higgs
boson. Part II of the book summarizes the important investigations
into the physics of neutrinos and provides an overview of the
interpretation of these studies.
The transport of electric charge through most materials is well
described in terms of their electronic band structure. The present
book deals with two cases where the charge transport in a solid is
not described by the simple band structure picture of the solid.
These cases are related to the phenomena of the quantum Hall effect
and superconductivity. Part I of this book deals with the quantum
Hall effect, which is a consequence of the behavior of electrons in
solids when they are constrained to move in two dimensions. Part II
of the present volume describes the behavior of superconductors,
where electrons are bound together in Cooper pairs and travel
through a material without resistance.
The effect which now bears his name, was discovered in 1958 by
Rudolf Moessbauer at the Technical University of Munich. At first,
this appeared to be a phenomenon related to nuclear energy levels
that provided some information about excited state lifetimes and
quantum properties. However, it soon became apparent that
Moessbauer spectroscopy had applications in such diverse fields as
general relativity, solid state physics, chemistry, materials
science, biology, medical physics, archeology and art. It is the
extreme sensitivity of the effect to the atomic environment around
the probe atom as well as the ability to apply the technique to
some interesting and important elements, most notably iron, that is
responsible for the Moessbauer effect's extensive use. The present
volume reviews the historical development of the Moessbauer effect,
the experimental details, the basic physics of hyperfine
interactions and some of the numerous applications of Moessbauer
effect spectroscopy.
For many years, evidence suggested that all solid materials either
possessed a periodic crystal structure as proposed by the Braggs or
they were amorphous glasses with no long-range order. In the 1970s,
Roger Penrose hypothesized structures (Penrose tilings) with
long-range order which were not periodic. The existence of a solid
phase, known as a quasicrystal, that possessed the structure of a
three dimensional Penrose tiling, was demonstrated experimentally
in 1984 by Dan Shechtman and colleagues. Shechtman received the
2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery. The discovery and
description of quasicrystalline materials provided the first
concrete evidence that traditional crystals could be viewed as a
subset of a more general category of ordered materials. This book
introduces the diversity of structures that are now known to exist
in solids through a consideration of quasicrystals (Part I) and the
various structures of elemental carbon (Part II) and through an
analysis of their relationship to conventional crystal structures.
Both quasicrystals and the various allotropes of carbon are
excellent examples of how our understanding of the microstructure
of solids has progressed over the years beyond the concepts of
traditional crystallography.
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