Electrodynamics of Continuous MediaCovers the theory of electromagnetic fields in matter, and the theory of the macroscopic electric and magnetic properties of matter. There is a considerable amount of new material particularly on the theory of the magnetic properties of matter and the theory of optical phenomena with new chapters on spatial dispersion and non-linear optics. The chapters on ferromagnetism and antiferromagnetism and on magnetohydrodynamics have been substantially enlarged and eight other chapters have additional sections. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 15
Page 903
... cross - section measurements were being made by Naval Research Laboratory [ 28 ] , Evans Signal Laboratory , Air Force Cambridge Re- search Center [ 29 ] , and McGill University [ 30 ] . The first - known use of a pulsed system on a model ...
... cross - section measurements were being made by Naval Research Laboratory [ 28 ] , Evans Signal Laboratory , Air Force Cambridge Re- search Center [ 29 ] , and McGill University [ 30 ] . The first - known use of a pulsed system on a model ...
Page 155
... cross-section differences yield the real part of the forward charge exchange cross-sections. Figure 46 shows the results of such calculations in the case of the pion-nucleon system. The computation of the pion—nucleon asymptotic total cross ...
... cross-section differences yield the real part of the forward charge exchange cross-sections. Figure 46 shows the results of such calculations in the case of the pion-nucleon system. The computation of the pion—nucleon asymptotic total cross ...
Page 140
... cross-section, and the uncertainty on the integrated luminosity. The total systematic uncertainty on the measured cross-section, taking correlations between the sources into account where necessary, amounts to 15–18% within the ET-range ...
... cross-section, and the uncertainty on the integrated luminosity. The total systematic uncertainty on the measured cross-section, taking correlations between the sources into account where necessary, amounts to 15–18% within the ET-range ...
Contents
ELECTROSTATICS OF CONDUCTORS | 1 |
2 The energy of the electrostatic field of conductors | 7 |
4 A conducting ellipsoid | 27 |
Copyright | |
101 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
angle anisotropy anisotropy energy antiferromagnetic atoms averaging axes axis body boundary conditions calculation charge coefficient components conductor constant coordinates corresponding cross-section crystal Curie point curl H denote depends derivative determined dielectric diffraction direction discontinuity dispersion E₁ E₂ electric field electromagnetic electrons ellipsoid expression external field factor ferroelectric ferromagnet field H fluctuations fluid flux formula free energy frequency function given gives grad H₁ H₂ Hence incident induction integral isotropic Laplace's equation linear magnetic field magnetic moment Maxwell's equations medium normal obtain optical particle permittivity perpendicular perturbation phase plane polarization PROBLEM propagated properties pyroelectric quantities refraction relation respect result rotation satisfied scattering sinē SOLUTION sphere suffixes superconducting surface symmetry temperature tensor theory thermodynamic potential transition uniaxial values variable velocity volume wave vector z-axis zero Απ