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Journal ArticleDOI

Co-operative Jahn-Teller effects

G A Gehring, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1975 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 1, pp 1-89
TLDR
The co-operative Jahn-Teller effect is a phase transition which is driven by the interaction between localized orbital electronic states and the crystal lattice as mentioned in this paper, and the possible origins, symmetries and properties of the electron-lattice interactions and how they lead to possible hamiltonians for the coupled system are discussed.
Abstract
The co-operative Jahn-Teller effect is a phase transition which is driven by the interaction between localized orbital electronic states and the crystal lattice. The possible origins, symmetries and properties of the electron-lattice interactions and how they lead to possible hamiltonians for the coupled system are discussed. The relation of these interactions with quadrupolar interactions and magnetostriction is included. The methods of solution of the hamiltonians lead to an understanding of the electronic states, the phonon spectrum and the mixed normal modes. The wide variety of experimental techniques used on this problem are reviewed in detail and the results are compared with theoretical expressions whenever possible. The application of external stress and magnetic field is of particular significance in the case of the rare earth compounds, because they can product effects which are larger than the low-temperature spontaneous effects.

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Citations
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Orbital Physics in Transition-Metal Oxides

TL;DR: An overview is given here on this "orbital physics," which will be a key concept for the science and technology of correlated electrons.
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The superposition model of crystal fields

TL;DR: The superposition model was originally developed to separate the geometrical and physical information in crystal field parameters as discussed by the authors, and its success in the analysis of lanthanide spectra has paralleled by the success of the related angular overlap model in analysis of d-electron spectra.
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Impulsive stimulated scattering: General importance in femtosecond laser pulse interactions with matter, and spectroscopic applications

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that "impulsive" stimulated Raman scattering (ISRS) should occur, with no laser intensity threshold, when a sufficiently short laser pulse passes through many types of matter.
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Superionic conductors: Transitions, structures, dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the physics of superionic conductors with emphasis on the new insights that the research of the past few years has brought about is discussed. But the authors focus on the excitation spectrum and their relationship to high ionic conductivities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of Polyatomic Molecules in Degenerate Electronic States. I. Orbital Degeneracy

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that if the total electronic state of orbital and spin motion is degenerate, then a non-linear configuration of the molecule will be unstable unless the degeneracy is the special twofold one (discussed by Kramers 1930) which can occur only when the molecule contains an odd number of electrons.
Journal ArticleDOI

The raising of angular momentum degeneracy of f-Electron terms by cubic crystal fields

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of cubic crystal field Hamiltonians with both fourth and sixth degree terms and acting on an angular momentum J, has been investigated as a function of the ratio between the fourth and six degree terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single-particle distribution in the hydrodynamic and statistical thermodynamic models of multiparticle production

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the single-particle distribution for an expanding relativistic gas described by a distribution function obeying the Boltzmann transport equation is not of the form of an integral over collective motions of a velocity weight function times a "Lorentz-transformed" rest-frame distribution function.
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