The first volume of Quantum Mechanics for Nuclear Structure introduced the reader to the basic elements that underpin the one-body formulation of quantum mechanics.
In addition, the book should prepare a student to read the latest literature on the subject and also train him to do group theoretic work in nuclear physics. The organization of the material in the book is described in Chapter 1.
Rotenberg, M., Bivins, R., Metropolis, N., and Wooten, J. K. (1959). “The 3-j and 6-j Symbols.” Technology Press, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Sato, M., and Kaguei, S. ( 1972). Phys. Lett. 4213, 21. Appendix B THE WIGNER-ECKART ...
This book introduces the current understanding of the fundamentals of nuclear physics by referring to key experimental data and by providing a theoretical understanding of principal nuclear properties.
Covers all the phenomenological and experimental data on nuclear physics and demonstrates the latest experimental developments that can be obtained.
The book begins with the conceptual and mathematical basics of quantum mechanics, and goes into the main point of nuclear physics – nuclear structure, radioactive ion beam physics, and nuclear reactions.
This book is aimed at enabling the reader to obtain a working knowledge of the nuclear shell model and to understand nuclear structure within the framework of the shell model.
Nuclear Structure Theory
This book is comprised of 17 chapters and begins with an overview of early successes and difficulties experienced by nuclear physics as a discipline, paying particular attention to early applications of quantum mechanics and reactions with ...
This book contains chapters on some of the crucial and trending research topics in nuclear structure, including the nuclei lying on the extremes of spin, isospin and mass.