He 60 Potential


Download He 60 Potential PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get He 60 Potential book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Theory of Atomic and Molecular Clusters


Theory of Atomic and Molecular Clusters

Author: Julius Jellinek

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2012-12-06


DOWNLOAD





The emergence and spectacularly rapid evolution of the field of atomic and molecular clusters are among the most exciting developments in the recent history of natural sciences. The field of clusters expands into the traditional disciplines of physics, chemistry, materials science, and biology, yet in many respects it forms a cognition area of its own. This book presents a cross section of theoretical approaches and their applications in studies of different cluster systems. The contributions are written by experts in the respective areas. The systems discussed range from weakly (van der Waals) bonded, through hydrogen- and covalently bonded, to semiconductor and metallic clusters. The theoretical approaches involve high-level electronic structure computations, more approximate electronic structure treatments, use of semiempirical potentials, dynamical and statistical analyses, and illustrate the utility of both classical and quantum mechanical concepts.

Computational Physics of Carbon Nanotubes


Computational Physics of Carbon Nanotubes

Author: Hashem Rafii-Tabar

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 2008


DOWNLOAD





This book presents the key theories, computational modelling and numerical simulation tools required to understand carbon nanotube physics. Specifically, methods applied to geometry and bonding, mechanical, thermal, transport and storage properties are addressed. This self-contained book will interest researchers across a broad range of disciplines.

Collision- and Interaction-Induced Spectroscopy


Collision- and Interaction-Induced Spectroscopy

Author: G.C. Tabisz

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2012-12-06


DOWNLOAD





Collision-or interaction-induced spectroscopy refers to radiative transitions, which are forbidden in free atoms or molecules, but which occur in clusters of interacting atoms or molecules. The most common phenomena are induced absorption, in the infrared region, and induced light scattering, which involves inelastic scattering of visible laser light. The particle interactions giving rise to the necessary induced dipole moments and polarizabilities are modelled at long range by multipole expansions; at short range, electron overlap and exchange mechanisms come into play. Information on atomic and molecular interactions and dynamics in dense media on a picosecond timescale may be drawn from the spectra. Collision-induced absorption in the infrared was discovered at the University of Toronto in 1949 by Crawford, Welsh and Locke who studied liquid O and N. Through the 1950s and 1960s, 2 2 experimental elucidation of the phenomenon, particularly in gases, continued and theoretical underpinnings were established. In the late 1960s, the related phenomenon of collision-induced light scattering was first observed in compressed inert gases. In 1978, an 'Enrico Fermi' Summer School was held at Varenna, Italy, under the directorship of J. Van Kranendonk. The lectures, there, reviewed activity from the previous two decades, during which the approach to the subject had not changed greatly. In 1983, a highly successful NATO Advanced Research Workshop was held at Bonas, France, under the directorship of G. Birnbaum. An important outcome of that meeting was the demonstration of the maturity and sophistication of current experimental and theoretical techniques.