The book reviews several theoretical, mostly exactly solvable, models for selected systems in condensed states of matter, including the solid, liquid, and disordered states, and for systems of few or many bodies, both with boson, fermion, or anyon statistics. Some attention is devoted to models for
Classical solvable many-body problems
β Scribed by Francesco Calogero
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 747
- Series
- Lecture notes in physics, New series Monographs 66
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book focuses on exactly treatable classical (i.e. non-quantal non-relativistic) many-body problems, as described by Newton's equation of motion for mutually interacting point particles. Most of the material is based on the author's research and is published here for the first time in book form. One of the main novelties is the treatment of problems in two- and three-dimensional space. Many related techniques are presented, e.g. the theory of generalized Lagrangian-type interpolation in higher-dimensional spaces.This book is written for students as well as for researchers; it works out detailed examples before going on to treat more general cases. Many results are presented via exercises, with clear hints pointing to their solutions.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This book addresses problems in three main developments in modern condensed matter physicsβ namely topological superconductivity, many-body localization and strongly interacting condensates/superfluidsβby employing fruitful analogies from classical mechanics. This strategy has led to tangible
cited on [EqWorld](http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/) * * * This is a book by one of the pioneers of soliton theory, known also as the theory of integrable systems. In particular, one of the early monographs on the inverse scattering approach to KdV was written by the author and A. Degasperis [Spectral tran
"This book focuses on exactly treatable classical (i.e. non-quantal non-relativistic) many-body problems, as described by Newton's equation of motion for mutually interacting point particles. Most of the material is based on the author's research and is published here for the first time in book form