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Chemical Dynamics at Low Temperatures, Volume 88

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ISBN: 978-0-470-14200-4

September 2009

400 pages

Description
The first unified treatment of experimental and theoretical advances in low-temperature chemistry Chemical Dynamics at Low Temperatures is a landmark publication. For the first time, the cumulative results of twenty years of experimental and theoretical research into low-temperature chemistry have been collected and presented in a unified treatment. The result is a text/reference that both offers an overview of the subject and contains sufficient detail to guide practicing researchers toward fertile ground for future research. Topics covered include:
  • Developmental history
  • Formulation of general problems and the main approximations used to solve them
  • Specific features of tunneling chemical dynamics
  • One-dimensional tunneling in the path integral formalism
  • Special problems of two- and multidimensional tunneling
  • An extended presentation of pertinent experimental results
About the Author
VICTOR A. BENDERSKII was born in 1938 in Leningrad (St. Petersburg). He graduated from Moscow State University in 1959 with a degree in chemistry and earned a PhD from the Institute of Chemical Physics in 1972. He is currently Professor of Chemistry at Moscow State University and the Director of the Department of Photoelectrochemistry and Cryochemistry at the Institute for Chemical Physics in Chernogolovka, Russia. In 1989 he was the winner of the State Prize of the USSR.

DMITRII E. MAKAROV was born in 1968. He graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology in 1990 and earned a Candidate of Sciences degree in theoretical physics from the Institute of Chemical Physics in 1993. He is currently a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

CHARLES A. WIGHT is Associate Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City A recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship (1990-1992), he received his PhD from the California Institute of Technology in 1982, and was a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Colorado from 1982 to 1984.