Max Born

Atomic Physics: 8th Edition

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First published in English in 1935, this classic treatment is well known to students and teachers of physics around the world. Since its original publication, Professor Born (Nobel laureate, 1954) continually updated the book to incorporate new developments in all branches of physics, particularly in the field of elementary particles. For this eighth edition he also wrote a new chapter on the quantum theory of solids.Contents include:Kinetic theory of gasesElementary particlesSpin of the electron and Paul's principleThe nuclear atomWave-corpusclesAtomic structure and spectral linesQuantum statisticsMolecular structureQuantum theory of solidsNuclear physicsOver 40 helpful appendixes, dealing with the mean square deviation, theory of relativity, electron theory, the Compton effect, Hamiltonian theory and action variables, atomic form factor, meson theory, van der Waals forces, and other topics supplement the main text. A bibliography and numerous figures and graphs further enhance the usefulness of Atomic Physics, which retains its value as a broad treatment of basic physics from the special perspective of a towering figure in the field.
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2,078 printed pages
Publication year
2013
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Quotes

  • Hardy-Veblen alikehas quoted5 years ago
    They suggest themselves almost inevitably when we try to interpret the simple regularities which are at once disclosed when the masses of the substances transformed in chemical reactions are determined quantitatively with the balance. It is established in the first place, that in a reaction the total weight remains unchanged. Secondly, it is found that substances combine only in fixed simple proportions by weight, so that a definite weight of one substance can only enter into reaction with definite weights of a
  • Hardy-Veblen alikehas quoted5 years ago
    The most important result, that the mass of an atom is almost wholly concentrated in a very small nucleus
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