Handbook of Neutron Optics

1. Edition January 2010
XX, 590 Pages, Hardcover
260 Pictures
2 tables
Handbook/Reference Book
Short Description
Written by an author with an international reputation, acknowledged expertise and teaching experience so as to be readily accessible, this is the most up-to-date resource for the field.
Relevant to nuclear physicists and materials scientists alike.
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Written by authors with an international reputation, acknowledged expertise and teaching experience, this is the most up-to-date resource on the field. The text is clearly structured throughout so as to be readily accessible, and begins by looking at scattering of a scalar particle by one-dimensional systems. The second section deals with the scattering of neutrons with spin in one-dimensional potentials, while the third treats dynamical diffraction in three-dimensional periodic media. The final two sections conclude with incoherent and small angle scattering, and some problems of quantum mechanics.
With its treatment of the theories, experiments and applications involved in neutron optics, this relevant reading for nuclear physicists and materials scientists alike.
2. Scattering of neutrons with spin in one dimensional potentials
3. Dynamical diffraction in three dimensional periodic media
4. Disordered media - incoherent and small angle scattering
5. Scattering theory, and some problems of quantum mechanics
Vladimir Ignatovich is a senior scientist at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research JINR in Dubna, Russia. Having obtained his academic degrees from Moscow State University, he spent most of his career working in the Laboratory of Neutron Physics at JINR. Dr. Ignatovich has authored over 150 scientific publications and a book on ultracold neutrons. Visits and invited talks have taken him to international institutions like NIST, CALTECH and National Laboratories (USA), to many laboratories in Europe, and to the Research Reactor Institute of Kyoto University, where he spent a whole year. He is a member of the Russian Physical Society and of the Neutron Scattering Society of America.