Electronic excitations in liquefied rare glass.1588830365 Electronic excitations in liquefied rare glass. Ed. by Werner F. Schmidt and Eugen Illenberger. American Scientific Publishers 2005 472 pages $299.00 Hardcover QC718 For physicists, chemists, electrical engineers This is a list of electrical engineers, people who made contributions to electrical engineering or computer engineering.
Addition of a discrete amount of energy to a system that changes it usually from a state of lowest energy (ground state) to one of higher energy (excited state). For example, in a hydrogen atom, an excitation energy of 10. , which have applications in detectors for high-energy physics, and in light sources for the extreme ultraviolet, among others. Coverage begins with explication ex·pli·cate tr.v. ex·pli·cat·ed, ex·pli·cat·ing, ex·pli·cates To make clear the meaning of; explain. See Synonyms at explain. [Latin explic of ground state properties of rare gas fluids and their microscopic foundations. A sampling of topics of subsequent chapters: high pressure effects, band structure parameters, high-energy radiation, solutes, superfluid su·per·flu·id n. A fluid, such as a liquid form of helium, exhibiting a frictionless flow at temperatures close to absolute zero. su helium II helium II n. Liquid helium existing as a superfluid below the transition point of approximately 2.2°K at 1 atmosphere and having extremely low viscosity and extremely high thermal conductivity. , electric discharges, principles of production and ultra purification, helium droplets, and electron and ion mobility. ([c] 2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR) |
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