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|a UAMI
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|a Peierls, Rudolf,
|e author
|1 http://viaf.org/viaf/51718146
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|a Surprises in Theoretical Physics.
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|a Princeton :
|b Princeton University Press,
|c 1979.
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|a 1 online resource (178 pages).
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|a Princeton Series in Physics Ser.
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|a Description based upon print version of record.
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|a Cover Page -- Half-title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- 1. General Quantum Mechanics -- 1.1 Born Approximation for Short-Range Interaction -- 1.2 Shadow Scattering -- 1.3 Waves and Particles -- 1.4 Angle Operator -- 1.5 The Adiabatic Expansion -- 1.6 Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics -- 1.7 y-Ray Microscope -- 1.8 Alarm-Clock Paradox -- 2. Quantum Theory Of Atoms -- 2.1 Scattering of y-Rays -- 2.2 Limits of the Heitler-London Approximation -- 2.3 Ground State of In Fermions in One Dimension -- 3. Statistical Mechanics -- 3.1 Pauli Principle in Metals
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|a 3.2 Ionization -- 3.3 Perturbation Theory for Statistical Equilibrium -- 3.4 Minimum Property of the Free Energy -- 3.5 Variation Principle for First N States -- 3.6 Influence of Boundary Conditions -- 3.7 Specification of Surface Energy -- 3.8 Irreversibility -- 4. Condensed Matter -- 4.1 Melting in One, Two, and Three Dimensions -- 4.2 Momentum of Phonons -- 4.3 Electron Diamagnetism -- 4.4 De Haas-Van Alphen Effect -- 5. Transport Problems -- 5.1 Density Expansion of Diffusion Coefficient -- 5.2 Thermal Conduction in Non-Metals -- 5.3 Perturbation Theory in Transport Problems
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|a 6. Many-Body Problems -- 6.1 Off-Shell Effects in Multiple Scattering -- 6.2 Perturbation Theory in Many-Body Systems -- 6.3 Positronium Formation in Metals -- 7. Nuclear Physics -- 7.1 The Shell Model -- 7.2 Center-of-Mass Motion -- 8. Relativity -- 8.1 Radiation in Hyperbolic Motion
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|a Problems in theoretical physics often lead to paradoxical answers; yet closer reasoning and a more complete analysis invariably lead to the resolution of the paradox and to a deeper understanding of the physics involved. Drawing primarily from his own experience and that of his collaborators, Sir Rudolf Peierls selects examples of such "surprises" from a wide range of physical theory, from quantum mechanical scattering theory to the theory of relativity, from irreversibility in statistical mechanics to the behavior of electrons in solids. By studying such surprises and learning what kind of possibilities to look for, he suggests, scientists may be able to avoid errors in future problems. In some cases the surprise is that the outcome of a calculation is contrary to what physical intuition seems to demand. In other instances an approximation that looks convincing turns out to be unjustified, or one that looks unreasonable turns out to be adequate. Professor Peierls does not suggest, however, that theoretical physics is a hazardous game in which one can never foresee the surprises a detailed calculation might reveal. Rather, he contends, all the surprises discussed have rational explanations, most of which are very simple, at least in principle. This book is based on the author's lectures at the University of Washington in the spring of 1977 and at the Institut de Physique Nucleaire, University de Paris-Sud, Orsay, during the winter of 1977-1978.
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|a Mathematical physics
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|i Print version:
|a Peierls, Rudolf
|t Surprises in Theoretical Physics
|d Princeton : Princeton University Press,c1979
|z 9780691082417
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|a Princeton Series in Physics Ser.
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