Go back

Introduction To The Theory Of Collisions Of Electrons With Atoms And Molecules(1st Edition)

Authors:

S.p. Khare

Free introduction to the theory of collisions of electrons with atoms and molecules 1st edition s.p. khare
4 ratings
Cover Type:Hardcover
Condition:Used

In Stock

Include with your book

Free shipping: April 06, 2024
Access to 3 Million+ solutions Free
Ask 10 Questions from expert 200,000+ Expert answers
7 days-trial

Total Price:

$0

List Price: $99.99 Savings: $99.99(100%)

Book details

ISBN: 146135157X, 978-1461351573

Book publisher: Springer

Get your hands on the best-selling book Introduction To The Theory Of Collisions Of Electrons With Atoms And Molecules 1st Edition for free. Feed your curiosity and let your imagination soar with the best stories coming out to you without hefty price tags. Browse SolutionInn to discover a treasure trove of fiction and non-fiction books where every page leads the reader to an undiscovered world. Start your literary adventure right away and also enjoy free shipping of these complimentary books to your door.

Introduction To The Theory Of Collisions Of Electrons With Atoms And Molecules 1st Edition Summary: An understanding of the collisions between micro particles is of great importance for the number of fields belonging to physics, chemistry, astrophysics, biophysics etc. The present book, a theory for electron-atom and molecule collisions is developed using non-relativistic quantum mechanics in a systematic and lucid manner. The scattering theory is an essential part of the quantum mechanics course of all universities. During the last 30 years, the author has lectured on the topics presented in this book (collisions physics, photon-atom collisions, electron-atom and electron-molecule collisions, "electron-photon delayed coincidence technique", etc.) at many institutions including Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, The University of Western Ontario, Canada, and The Meerut University, India. The present book is the outcome of those lectures and is written to serve as a textbook for post-graduate and pre-PhD students and as a reference book for researchers.