Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /

The Third International Conference on Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter was held at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island from August 28-31, 1979. The previous conferences in this series were held at Nottingham in 1975, and in France at Paris and Ste Maxime in 1972. Until about 15 years ago phonon scattering was studied almost exclusively by measurements of thermal conductivity. This approach has the severe limitation that the result obtained for the phonon scattering rate is actually the average of the scattering for all of the phonons in the sample. Thus, no distinction can be made between phonons of different polarization, direction of propagation, or energy. During the 1960's several significant developments occurred. The most important of these was the application by Von Gutfeld and Nethercot of the "heat-pulse" method, previously used only in liquid helium, to the investigation of phonons in crystals. This approach makes possible the study of the propagation and scat­ tering of phonons of known polarization and propagation direction. The early heat-pulse experiments used phonon generators which pro­ duced phonons having a broad distribution of energies and, in addi­ tion, the phonon detectors were sensitive to phonons of all energies.

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Main Authors: Maris, Humphrey J. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Boston, MA : Springer US, 1980
Subjects:Physics., Solid state physics., Spectroscopy., Microscopy., Solid State Physics., Spectroscopy and Microscopy.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-3063-9
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2321872018-07-31T00:16:02ZPhonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] / Maris, Humphrey J. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textBoston, MA : Springer US,1980.engThe Third International Conference on Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter was held at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island from August 28-31, 1979. The previous conferences in this series were held at Nottingham in 1975, and in France at Paris and Ste Maxime in 1972. Until about 15 years ago phonon scattering was studied almost exclusively by measurements of thermal conductivity. This approach has the severe limitation that the result obtained for the phonon scattering rate is actually the average of the scattering for all of the phonons in the sample. Thus, no distinction can be made between phonons of different polarization, direction of propagation, or energy. During the 1960's several significant developments occurred. The most important of these was the application by Von Gutfeld and Nethercot of the "heat-pulse" method, previously used only in liquid helium, to the investigation of phonons in crystals. This approach makes possible the study of the propagation and scat­ tering of phonons of known polarization and propagation direction. The early heat-pulse experiments used phonon generators which pro­ duced phonons having a broad distribution of energies and, in addi­ tion, the phonon detectors were sensitive to phonons of all energies.Amorphous Materials -- Spin-Phonon Interactions -- Phonon-Phonon Interactions -- Helium -- Kapitza Resistance -- Defects -- Phase Transitions -- New Techniques -- Phonon Propagation and Echoes -- Semiconductors -- Metals and Superconductors -- List of Delegates.The Third International Conference on Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter was held at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island from August 28-31, 1979. The previous conferences in this series were held at Nottingham in 1975, and in France at Paris and Ste Maxime in 1972. Until about 15 years ago phonon scattering was studied almost exclusively by measurements of thermal conductivity. This approach has the severe limitation that the result obtained for the phonon scattering rate is actually the average of the scattering for all of the phonons in the sample. Thus, no distinction can be made between phonons of different polarization, direction of propagation, or energy. During the 1960's several significant developments occurred. The most important of these was the application by Von Gutfeld and Nethercot of the "heat-pulse" method, previously used only in liquid helium, to the investigation of phonons in crystals. This approach makes possible the study of the propagation and scat­ tering of phonons of known polarization and propagation direction. The early heat-pulse experiments used phonon generators which pro­ duced phonons having a broad distribution of energies and, in addi­ tion, the phonon detectors were sensitive to phonons of all energies.Physics.Solid state physics.Spectroscopy.Microscopy.Physics.Solid State Physics.Spectroscopy and Microscopy.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-3063-9URN:ISBN:9781461330639
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Physics.
Solid state physics.
Spectroscopy.
Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid State Physics.
Spectroscopy and Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid state physics.
Spectroscopy.
Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid State Physics.
Spectroscopy and Microscopy.
spellingShingle Physics.
Solid state physics.
Spectroscopy.
Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid State Physics.
Spectroscopy and Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid state physics.
Spectroscopy.
Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid State Physics.
Spectroscopy and Microscopy.
Maris, Humphrey J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
description The Third International Conference on Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter was held at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island from August 28-31, 1979. The previous conferences in this series were held at Nottingham in 1975, and in France at Paris and Ste Maxime in 1972. Until about 15 years ago phonon scattering was studied almost exclusively by measurements of thermal conductivity. This approach has the severe limitation that the result obtained for the phonon scattering rate is actually the average of the scattering for all of the phonons in the sample. Thus, no distinction can be made between phonons of different polarization, direction of propagation, or energy. During the 1960's several significant developments occurred. The most important of these was the application by Von Gutfeld and Nethercot of the "heat-pulse" method, previously used only in liquid helium, to the investigation of phonons in crystals. This approach makes possible the study of the propagation and scat­ tering of phonons of known polarization and propagation direction. The early heat-pulse experiments used phonon generators which pro­ duced phonons having a broad distribution of energies and, in addi­ tion, the phonon detectors were sensitive to phonons of all energies.
format Texto
topic_facet Physics.
Solid state physics.
Spectroscopy.
Microscopy.
Physics.
Solid State Physics.
Spectroscopy and Microscopy.
author Maris, Humphrey J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Maris, Humphrey J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Maris, Humphrey J. editor.
title Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
title_short Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
title_full Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Phonon Scattering in Condensed Matter [electronic resource] /
title_sort phonon scattering in condensed matter [electronic resource] /
publisher Boston, MA : Springer US,
publishDate 1980
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-3063-9
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