Solid-State Theory - An Introduction is a textbook for graduate students of physics and material sciences. It stands in the tradition of older textbooks on this subject but takes up new developments in theoretical concepts and materials which are connected with such path breaking discoveries as the Quantum-Hall Effects, the high-Tc superconductors, and the low-dimensional systems realized in solids. Thus besides providing the fundamental concepts to describe the physics of electrons and ions of which the solid consists, including their interactions and the interaction with light, the book casts a bridge to the experimental facts and opens the view into current research fields.
Author(s): Ulrich Rössler (auth.)
Series: Rössler
Edition: 2
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 398
Tags: Solid State Physics;Spectroscopy and Microscopy;Engineering, general;Surfaces and Interfaces, Thin Films;Optical and Electronic Materials;Characterization and Evaluation of Materials
Front Matter....Pages 1-17
Introduction....Pages 1-13
The Solid as a Many-Particle Problem....Pages 15-36
Lattice Dynamics: Phonons....Pages 37-74
The Free Electron Gas....Pages 75-117
Electrons in a Periodic Potential....Pages 119-159
Spin Waves: Magnons....Pages 161-193
Correlated Electrons....Pages 195-229
Electron–Phonon Interaction....Pages 231-263
Defects, Disorder, and Localization....Pages 265-290
Light–Matter Interaction....Pages 291-324
Appendices....Pages 325-336
Back Matter....Pages 337-398