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Publication Date: 1956
Seller: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Kobenhavn 1956 Matematisk-fysiske Meddelelser Bind 31, Nr.1. Lg.8vo., 74pp., wraps. Unopened. Good Plus.
Publication Date: 1960
Seller: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Near Fine. Kobenhavn 1960 first edition. Matematisk-fysiske Meddelelser , bind 32, nr. 8. original printed octavo wraps. 71p. Near Fine, no marks.
København, Ejnar Munksgaard, 1955. 8vo. In the original printed wrappers. Offprint from "Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab", Matematisk-fysiske meddelelser, bind 29, no. 19. Very fine and clean. 19, (1) pp. Offprint of Alder and Winther's paper in which they show that the calculation of the total cross section for coulomb excitation can be reduced to the calculation of radial matrix elements between eigenstates in the coulomb potential.
FIRST EDITION IN ORIGINAL PRINTED WRAPS OF A "LANDMARK REVIEW" & "DEFINITIVE THEORY" OF COULOMB EXCITATION & ONE OF THE 100 MOST CITED PAPERS TO APPEAR IN THE JOURNAL REVIEWS OF MODERN PHYSICS(Cline, "Nuclear Shapes", Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part, 1986, 684; History of Physics: The Wenner Collection). Though the origin of the theory of Coulomb excitation can be traced back to a 1913 paper by Bohr on atomic Coulomb excitation,"the theoretical foundation of [it] was summarized in the 1956 landmark review paper [this paper] by the Copenhagen group" (Cline, "Nuclear Shapes", Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part, 1986, 684). The Copenhagen group consisted of Alder, Bohr, Huss, Mottelson, and Winther. Their paper is "famous" as both an important study and a classic review of Coulomb excitation. (Hamilton, Electromagnetic Excitation, Physics Bulletin, 27, 6). They investigated the issue "both experimentally and theoretically"; the result is a very detailed study now considered the "definitive theory of Coulomb excitation. Often considered one of the best tools for the investigation of nuclear properties, Coulomb excitation is "Nuclear excitation caused by the time-dependent electromagnetic field acting between colliding atomic nuclei" (Cline, 683). More specifically, it refers to the vibration and rotation of nuclei caused when they are disturbed by charged particles that come close enough to the nucleus to allow Coulomb forces to come into play (called the "Coulomb radius") but [not close enough to] impact the nucleus" (History of Physics: The Wenner Collection). CONDITION & DETAILS: Lancaster: American Physical Society. Volume 28, Number 4, October, 1956. Original printed wraps. (10.5 x 8 inches; 263 x 200mm). This is not an ex-institutional copy. Single ownership stamps of the physicist William Primak on the front wrap. Very slight wear at the edges of the wraps. Near fine condition inside and out.