 | |  | | | Principles of Nonlinear Optical Spectroscopy (Oxford Series on Optical and Imaging Sciences) | | | | | | | |
List Price:
| | |
Our Price:
| $104.95 | |
You Save:
| | | Shipping: | This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. | |
*Shipping:
| |
| | | SKU:
NU-FQC-00632606 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1 business days | | Only 4 left in stock, order soon! | | |
|
| | Product Promotions | |  |
| | Description | This textbook presents a systematic and unifying viewpoint for a wide class of nonlinear spectroscopic techniques in time domain and frequency domain. It is directed towards active researchers in physics, optics, chemistry, and materials science, as well as graduate students who enter this complex and rapidly developing field. Nonlinear optical interactions of laser fields with matter provide powerful spectroscopic tools for the understanding of microscopic interactions and dynamic processes. One of the major obstacles facing researchers in this field, however, is the flood of experimental techniques and terminologies, which create a serious language barrier. The general microscopic correlation function approach to the nonlinear optical response developed in this book is essential for understanding the relationships among different techniques and a comparison of their information content, the design of new measurements, and for a systematic comparison of the optical response of different systems such as dyes in solutions, atoms and molecules in the gas phase, liquids, molecular aggregates and superlatives, and semiconductor nanostructures. The approach is based on formulating the nonlinear response by representing the state of matter by the density matrix and following its evolution on Liouville space. Current active research areas such as femtosecond time-domain techniques, semi-classical and wave-packet dynamics, pulse shaping, pulse locking, exciton confinement, and the interplay of electronic, nuclear and field coherence are emphasized. The material has been developed from the author's highly successful interdisciplinary course at the University of Rochester attended by science and engineering graduate students. |  |
| | Product Details | | Author: | Shaul Mukamel | | Paperback: | 576 pages | | Publisher: | Oxford University Press, USA | | Publication Date: | April 29, 1999 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0195132912 | | Product Width: | 152.0 centimeters | | Product Height: | 227.5 centimeters | | Product Weight: | 1.76 pounds | | Package Length: | 9.2 inches | | Package Width: | 6.0 inches | | Package Height: | 1.5 inches | | Package Weight: | 1.85 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 2 reviews |
|  |
| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 2 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 found the following review helpful:
the bible for spectroscopists Feb 04, 2001 Unfortunately, this book is pretty much the only comprehesive text on the subject, and if you're a grad student about to begin study in this field, you will need this book. Mukamel is certainly very knowledgable, and he gives a unified treatment of absorption, transient grating, and photon echo spectroscopies in terms of double-sided Feynman diagrams. However, his treatment is highly algebraic and builds no physical intuition of the phenomena. If you can understand him, you probably thoroughly understood the topics before you read the book anyway. Self-study with this book will be frustrating, but it's an important resource for instructors and others who already understand the topic.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Principles of Nonlinear Optical Spectroscopy - a Must Have Mar 01, 2004 This is an excellent and very important book. The subject of nonlinear optical spectroscopy is a rapidly emerging field that is important in chemistry, physics, biology, and materials science. This book provides the theoretical underpinning for the entire field. It deals with a large number of experimental methods and topics that are widely used. This is a complex subject, and this is not a simple book. To present the theory at a level that enables researchers to understand and design experiments, it is necessary to go into depth in subjects that are complex conceptually and mathematically. A simplified version of the theory would be easier to follow, but it would not be useful. This book is a must for anyone in the field of nonlinear optical spectroscopy, whether he is an experimentalist or a theoretician.
|  |
| |
| |  | |  |
|