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What is the problem with cosmology? As a science cosmology is limited to the study of the universe as a whole, drawing conclusions based on astronomical observation and mathematical models. Over time cosmology has evolved from a speculative enterprise into a data-driven science; however, even in this new cosmology of facts and figures the origins of our universe remain a mystery, one that will perhaps never be solved. Every day new theories on the birth and evolution of the universe are made without the support of scientific observation-theories that may never be proven by hard evidence. And so cosmology remains a principle driven enterprise, with its roots deeply planted in the soil of unce...
This invaluable book explores the delicate interplay between geometry and statistical mechanics in materials such as microemulsions, wetting and growth interfaces, bulk lyotropic liquid crystals, chalcogenide glasses and sheet polymers, using tools from the fields of polymer physics, differential geometry, field theory and critical phenomena. Several chapters have been updated relative to the classic 1989 edition. Moreover, there are now three entirely new chapters on effects of anisotropy and heterogeneity, on fixed connectivity membranes and on triangulated surface models of fluctuating me.
Complete works by Boris Kriger include: "The Joys of Common Sense", "A Future Beyond Imagination", "The Uncertain Universe", "Lilli-Bunny and the Secret of a Happy Life", Theological and Scientific Articles
Contents: The Infamous Coulomb Gauge (G Leibbrandt)Renormalized Path Integral in Quantum Mechanics (R J Henderson & S G Rajeev)New Analysis of the Divergence of Perturbation Theory (S A Pernice)The Last of the Soluble Two Dimensional Field Theories? (C R Hagen)Rb and Heavy Quark Mixing (P Bamert)Rb Problem: Loop Contributions and Supersymmetry (J M Cline)QCD Radiative Effects in Inclusive Hadronic B Decays (B H Smith)CP-Violating Dipole Moments of Quarks in the Kobayashi–Maskawa Model (M Boridy et al.)Hints of Dynamical Symmetry Breaking? (B Holdom)Pi Pi Scattering in an Effective Chiral Lagrangian (M Harada)Pion-Resonance Parameters from QCD Sum Rules (T G Steele et al.)Higgs Theorem, Eff...
In recent years chemical engineers have become increasingly involved in the design and synthesis of new materials and products as well as the development of biological processes and biomaterials. Such applications often demand that product properties be controlled with precision. Molecular modeling, simulating chemical and molecular structures or processes by computer, aids scientists in this endeavor. Volume 28 of Advances in Chemical Engineering presents discussions of theoretical and computational methods as well as their applications to specific technologies.
This book contains the invited contributions to the 6th International Conference on Path Integrals from peV to TeV, held in Florence in 1998. The conference, devoted to functional integration, brought together many physicists with interests ranging from elementary particles to nuclear, solid state, liquid state, polymer and complex systems physics. The variety of topics is reflected in the book, which is a unique collection of papers on manifold applications of functional methods in several areas of physics.
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Multiscale Phenomena play an essential role in the dynamics of many complex systems. Owing to their inherent nonlinearity and the involvement of many different length scales, these systems are often only be studied through numerical simulations. The book focused on common structures and problems in fluid dynamics, particle physics and macromolecule simulations. An important aspect of the discussions was the development of simulation techniques for massively parallel computers and recent advances in the construction of special purpose parallel computers.
An invaluable reference to increasingly popular experimental methods In the past decade, combinatorial and high throughput experimental methods have revolutionized the pharmaceutical industry, allowing researchers to conduct more experiments in a week than was previously possible in a year. Now high throughput experimentation is rapidly spreading from its origins in the pharmaceutical world to larger industrial research establishments such as GE and DuPont, and even to smaller companies and universities. Consequently, researchers need to know the kinds of problems, desired outcomes, and appropriate patterns for these new strategies. Editor James Cawse's far-reaching study identifies and appl...