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This is the Proceedings of the Taniguchi International Symposium on
"Relaxation of Elementary Excitations" which was held October
12-16,1979, at Susono-shi (at the foot of f1t. Fuji) in Japan. The
pleasant atmosphere of the Symposium is evidenced in the picture of
the participants shown on the next page. The purpose of the
symposium was to provide an opportunity for a limited number of
active researchers to meet and to discuss relaxation processes and
related phenomena not only of excitons and phonons in solids but
also electronic and vibrational excitations in molecules and
biological systems. First, the lattice relaxation, i.e.,
multi-phonon process, associated with electronic excitation, which
plays important roles in self-trapping of an exciton and a particle
(electron and hole) and also in degradation of semi conductor
lasers, is discussed. Second, this lattice relaxation is studied as
the intermediate state interaction in the second-order optical
responses, i.e., in connection with the competitive behavior of
Raman scattering and luminescence. Third, relaxation mechanisms and
relaxation constants are by spectroscopic methods as well as by
genuine nonlinear optical determined phenomena. Conversely the
relaxation is decisive in coherent nonlinear optical phenomena such
as laser, superradiance, and optical bistability. Fourth, the role
played by relaxation processes is discussed for optical phenomena
in macromolecules and biological system such as photosynthesis."
Dr. Yoshio Nishina was a key figure in modem physics in Japan and a
world pioneer in many fields of modem science such as nuclear
physics, cosmic-ray physics, and radiobiology. He devoted his life
to the development of science, so that his beloved country could
compete with any other country in science and technology.
Unfortunately, he died soon after the Second World War and did not
witness the results of his great efforts. To commemorate the
centennial of Dr. Nishina' s birth, a Nishina Centennial Symposium
was held in Tokyo from December 5 to 7, 1990, under the
co-sponsorship of the Nishina Memorial Foundation and RIKEN (the
Institute of Physical and Chemical Research). The symposium was
entitled Evolutionary Trends in the Physical Sciences. The title of
the symposium was very broad and ambitious. Indeed, progress in
physics over recent decades has been truly amazing, so much so that
the present frontiers of physics extend far beyond the horizons we
saw when we were young. Experiments in particle physics have
revealed many new particles, and may eventually lead to the
clarification of the ultimate structure of matter, though it is not
known whether man will ever fully understand how natural forces are
unified. At the same time, it is becoming more and more likely that
the creation of the universe will finally be discovered by
continuing the lines of research into physics that have been
pursued over the past decades.
Statistical Physics II introduces nonequilibrium theories of
statistical mechanics from the viewpoint of the
fluctuation-disipation theorem. Emphasis is placed on the
relaxation from nonequilibrium to equilibrium states, the response
of a system to an external disturbance, and general problems
involved in deriving a macroscopic physical process from more basic
underlying processes. Fundamental concepts and methods are
stressed, rather than the numerous individual applications.
Statistical Physics I discusses the fundamentals of equilibrium
statistical mechanics, focussing on basic physical aspects. No
previous knowledge of thermodynamics or the molecular theory of
gases is assumed. Illustrative examples based on simple materials
and photon systems elucidate the central ideas and methods.
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