Mössbauer Spectroscopy II: The Exotic Side of the Method
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Berlin, Heidelberg
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
1981
|
Schriftenreihe: | Topics in Current Physics
25 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Beschreibung: | Some newly discovered effects lose their glamor after a short period of euphoria. Others, however, retain their fascination for a long time and, even as they mature, display unexpected features. The Mossbauer effect belongs to the second category. Rudolf Mossbauer's discovery of recoilless gamma-ray emission in 1957 immediately caused a flurry of attention, and confirming work appeared almost at once. Since then the flow of publications has steadily increased. Most studies follow predict abl e paths; the essential aspects of these "conventional" experiments have been described in the first volume of the present work (Mossbauer Spectroscopy, Topics in Applied Physics, Vol. 5). These straightforward investigations have not, however, exhausted the field, boredom has not set in, and unexpected applications continue to appear. In the present volume, Uli Gonser has collected contributions that display the "exotic" side of the Mossbauer effect. They range from a masterly de scription of the red-shift experiment to a clear exposition of a powerful solution to the old and painful phase problem in crystallography. Each of the contributions exhibits a different side of recoilless gamma-ray emission. Together they show that the field is very much alive and continues to delight us with elegant solutions to old problems, unanticipated glimpses at new phenomena, clever uses of new technical possibilities, and ingenious applications to fields far away from physics. I believe that novel features of the Mossbauer effect will continue to appear and that new applications will still be found |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 198 p) |
ISBN: | 9783662088678 9783662088692 |
ISSN: | 0342-6793 |
DOI: | 10.1007/978-3-662-08867-8 |
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500 | |a Some newly discovered effects lose their glamor after a short period of euphoria. Others, however, retain their fascination for a long time and, even as they mature, display unexpected features. The Mossbauer effect belongs to the second category. Rudolf Mossbauer's discovery of recoilless gamma-ray emission in 1957 immediately caused a flurry of attention, and confirming work appeared almost at once. Since then the flow of publications has steadily increased. Most studies follow predict abl e paths; the essential aspects of these "conventional" experiments have been described in the first volume of the present work (Mossbauer Spectroscopy, Topics in Applied Physics, Vol. 5). These straightforward investigations have not, however, exhausted the field, boredom has not set in, and unexpected applications continue to appear. In the present volume, Uli Gonser has collected contributions that display the "exotic" side of the Mossbauer effect. They range from a masterly de scription of the red-shift experiment to a clear exposition of a powerful solution to the old and painful phase problem in crystallography. Each of the contributions exhibits a different side of recoilless gamma-ray emission. Together they show that the field is very much alive and continues to delight us with elegant solutions to old problems, unanticipated glimpses at new phenomena, clever uses of new technical possibilities, and ingenious applications to fields far away from physics. I believe that novel features of the Mossbauer effect will continue to appear and that new applications will still be found | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Gonser, Ulrich |
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spelling | Gonser, Ulrich Verfasser aut Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method edited by Ulrich Gonser With contributions by numerous experts Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1981 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 198 p) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Topics in Current Physics 25 0342-6793 Some newly discovered effects lose their glamor after a short period of euphoria. Others, however, retain their fascination for a long time and, even as they mature, display unexpected features. The Mossbauer effect belongs to the second category. Rudolf Mossbauer's discovery of recoilless gamma-ray emission in 1957 immediately caused a flurry of attention, and confirming work appeared almost at once. Since then the flow of publications has steadily increased. Most studies follow predict abl e paths; the essential aspects of these "conventional" experiments have been described in the first volume of the present work (Mossbauer Spectroscopy, Topics in Applied Physics, Vol. 5). These straightforward investigations have not, however, exhausted the field, boredom has not set in, and unexpected applications continue to appear. In the present volume, Uli Gonser has collected contributions that display the "exotic" side of the Mossbauer effect. They range from a masterly de scription of the red-shift experiment to a clear exposition of a powerful solution to the old and painful phase problem in crystallography. Each of the contributions exhibits a different side of recoilless gamma-ray emission. Together they show that the field is very much alive and continues to delight us with elegant solutions to old problems, unanticipated glimpses at new phenomena, clever uses of new technical possibilities, and ingenious applications to fields far away from physics. I believe that novel features of the Mossbauer effect will continue to appear and that new applications will still be found Physics Chemistry, Physical organic Condensed Matter Physics Physical Chemistry https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-08867-8 Verlag Volltext |
spellingShingle | Gonser, Ulrich Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method Physics Chemistry, Physical organic Condensed Matter Physics Physical Chemistry |
title | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method |
title_alt | With contributions by numerous experts |
title_auth | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method |
title_exact_search | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method |
title_full | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method edited by Ulrich Gonser |
title_fullStr | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method edited by Ulrich Gonser |
title_full_unstemmed | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II The Exotic Side of the Method edited by Ulrich Gonser |
title_short | Mössbauer Spectroscopy II |
title_sort | mossbauer spectroscopy ii the exotic side of the method |
title_sub | The Exotic Side of the Method |
topic | Physics Chemistry, Physical organic Condensed Matter Physics Physical Chemistry |
topic_facet | Physics Chemistry, Physical organic Condensed Matter Physics Physical Chemistry |
url | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-08867-8 |
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