Sole distributors for the USA and Canada, Elsevier Science Pub. Co.,
1986.
1 online resource (xvii, 446 pages) :
illustrations.
Progress in low temperature physics ;
10
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Front Cover; Progress in Low Temperature Physics, Volume X; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Chapter 1. Vortices in rotating superfluid 3He; 1. Introduction; 2. Vortices in rotating superfluid 4He; 3. General propertie of superfluid 3He; 4. Vortices in superfluid 3He-B; 5. Vortices in superfluid 3He-A; 6. Discussion; Note added in proof; References; Chapter 2. Charge motion in solid helium; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 3. Ionic mobilities; 4. Discussion; 5. Summary; References; Chapter 3. Spin-polarized atomic hydrogen; 1. Introduction; 2. Single-atom properties
3. Interatomic interactions4. Single-atom interactions with helium surfaces; 5. Experimental developments; 6. Theoretical aspects of stability: recombination and relaxation; 7. Thermodynamic properties; 8. Many-body static and dynamic magnetic properties; 9. Many-body effects on the surface; 10. Prospects for spin-polarized hydrogen; References; Chapter 4. Principles of ab initio calculations of superconducting transition temperatures; 1. Introduction; 2. Many-body aspects, diagram analysis; 3. The low-energy equations; 4. Band-structure theory and the electron-phonon interaction
5. Strong-Coupling Theory of the transition temperature6. Conclusion; References; Authors Index; Subject Index
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As in Volume IX, the quantum fluids theme still dominates. This is reflected in articles by Fetter on vortices in superfluid 3He, which bears both similarities and striking differences to those in superfluid 4He, and by Rainer on the ab initio calculation of the transition temperatures of superconductors. In the article by Silvera and Walraven, the authors review their original experiments on spin-polarized atomic hydrogen. Finally, Dahm's article deals with charge motion in solid helium, which is not so obviously a quantum fluid, but a system in which the behaviour is a typical example of low temperature phenomena.