Charged Particle And Photon Interactions With Matter


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Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter


Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter

Author: A. Mozumder

language: en

Publisher: CRC Press

Release Date: 2003-11-14


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Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter offers in-depth perspectives on phenomena of ionization and excitation induced by charged particle and photon interactions with matter in vivo and in vitro. This reference probes concepts not only in radiation and photochemistry, but also in radiation physics, radiation biochemistry, and radiatio

Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter


Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter

Author: Yoshihiko Hatano

language: en

Publisher: CRC Press

Release Date: 2010-12-13


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Building on Mozumder's and Hatano's Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter: Chemical, Physicochemical, and Biological Consequences with Applications (CRC Press, 2004), Charged Particle and Photon Interactions with Matter: Recent Advances, Applications, and Interfaces expands upon the scientific contents of the previous volume by cover

Experimental Techniques in Nuclear and Particle Physics


Experimental Techniques in Nuclear and Particle Physics

Author: Stefaan Tavernier

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2010-02-06


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I have been teaching courses on experimental techniques in nuclear and particle physics to master students in physics and in engineering for many years. This book grew out of the lecture notes I made for these students. The physics and engineering students have rather different expectations of what such a course should be like. I hope that I have nevertheless managed to write a book that can satisfy the needs of these different target audiences. The lectures themselves, of course, need to be adapted to the needs of each group of students. An engineering student will not qu- tion a statement like “the velocity of the electrons in atoms is ?1% of the velocity of light”, a physics student will. Regarding units, I have written factors h and c explicitly in all equations throughout the book. For physics students it would be preferable to use the convention that is common in physics and omit these constants in the equations, but that would probably be confusing for the engineering students. Physics students tend to be more interested in theoretical physics courses. However, physics is an experimental science and physics students should und- stand how experiments work, and be able to make experiments work. This is an open access book.