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The Feynman Lectures on Physics Addison-Wesley Reading
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This article is published in Journal of Multivariate Analysis.The article was published on 1963-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1364 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Reading (process).read more
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A field theoretical approach to calculate electronic Born-Oppenheimer coupling terms
TL;DR: This paper suggests to consider the spatial distribution of the Born-Oppenheimer nonadiabatic coupling terms as fields which are created by sources, located at degeneracy points, and which can be derived using the ordinary mathematical tools of field theory.
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On the Langevin approach to particle transport
TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that the Langevin model fails to account realistically for the transport of a charged particle in a medium under crossed electric and magnetic fields and the ensuing Hall effect, which is rooted in the concept of the friction force rather than in the accompanying random force.
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A Self-Consistent Acoustics Model of Interface Thermal Resistance
Bair V. Budaev,David B. Bogy +1 more
TL;DR: An analytically tractable acoustics model of thermal resistance of interfaces between dissimilar materials is developed and it is shown that a consistent development of the concept that heat in dielectrics is carried by lattice vibrations inevitably leads to the conclusion that heat-carrying acoustic waves must obey the introduced principle of heat radiation.
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Measurements of Young’s modulus and the modulus of rigidity of the solid solution of hydrogen in zirconium between 300 and 1300 K
TL;DR: In this paper, Young's modulus (E) and the modulus of rigidity (G) have been measured for zirconium between 300 and 1300 K and for ZrHx at 941 and 1001 K, using an apparatus capable of making in situ measurements under ultrahigh vacuum.
Centenary of marian smoluchowski's theory of brownian motion ∗
TL;DR: The irregular persistent motion of small particles suspended in liquids has been observed by an English botanist Robert Brown in 1827 when the first achromatic microscopes became available.