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BIOCHEMISTRY --- DICHROISM --- KERR EFFECT --- REFRACTION, DOUBLE --- TECHNIQUE --- BIOCHEMISTRY --- DICHROISM --- KERR EFFECT --- REFRACTION, DOUBLE --- TECHNIQUE
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Metal oxide semiconductors, Complementary --- Nanosilicon. --- Kerr effect. --- Design and construction.
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Kerr effect --- Refraction, Double --- Polarization (Light) --- Kerr, Effet. --- Biréfringence. --- Polarisation (lumière) --- Biréfringence. --- Polarisation (lumière)
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At the heart of the Milky Way lies a supermassive black hole 4 million times more massive than our Sun. A place where space and time are so warped that light is trapped if it ventures within 12 million km. According to Einstein, inside lies the end of time. According to 21st-century physics, the reality may be far more bizarre. Black holes lie where the most massive stars used to shine and at the edge of our current understanding. They are naturally occurring objects, the inevitable creations of gravity when too much matter collapses into not enough space. And yet, although the laws of nature predict them, they fail fully to describe them. Black holes are places in space and time where the laws of gravity, quantum physics and thermodynamics collide. Originally thought to be so intellectually troubling that they simply could not exist, it is only in the past few years that we have begun to glimpse a new synthesis ; a deep connection between gravity and quantum information theory that describes a holographic universe in which space and time emerge from a network of quantum bits, and wormholes span the void. In this groundbreaking book, Professor Brian Cox and Professor Jeff Forshaw take you to the edge of our understanding of black holes ; a scientific journey to the research frontier spanning a century of physics, from Einstein to Hawking and beyond, that ends with the startling conclusion that our world may operate like a giant quantum computer.
Black holes (Astronomy) --- White holes (Astronomy) --- Space and time. --- Kerr effect. --- Trous noirs (astronomie) --- Trous blancs (astronomie) --- Espace et temps. --- Kerr, Effet. --- Espace-temps. --- Kerr, R. P. --- Hawking, Stephen, --- Kerr, Roy P.,
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Fysicochemical analysis in organic chemistry --- fysicochemie --- Chemical bonds. Valence --- Physical organic chemistry --- Dipole moments --- Chimie organique physique --- 541.572 --- Chemistry, Physical organic --- Electric dipole moments --- Chemistry, Physical and theoretical --- Dielectrics --- Magnetic dipoles --- Matter --- Molecules --- Polarization (Electricity) --- Quadrupole moments --- Quadrupoles --- Chemistry, Organic --- Secondary bonds. Dipole forces. Van der Waals' forces --- Constitution --- Dipole moments. --- Physical organic chemistry. --- Cotton-Mouton effect --- Intermolecular interactions --- Kerr effect --- Structure determination --- Cotton-Mouton effect. --- Intermolecular interactions. --- Kerr effect. --- Structure determination. --- 541.572 Secondary bonds. Dipole forces. Van der Waals' forces --- Chemistry, physical organic
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678.01:532.73 --- 678.01:535 --- Polymers --- #WSCH:FYS3 --- Polymere --- Polymeride --- Polymers and polymerization --- Macromolecules --- Properties. Defects. Constitution. Serviceability. Sampling. Analysis. Testing-:-Solution. Solution phenomena. Physical solution. Solution kinetics --- Properties. Defects. Constitution. Serviceability. Sampling. Analysis. Testing-:-Optics --- 678.01:535 Properties. Defects. Constitution. Serviceability. Sampling. Analysis. Testing-:-Optics --- 678.01:532.73 Properties. Defects. Constitution. Serviceability. Sampling. Analysis. Testing-:-Solution. Solution phenomena. Physical solution. Solution kinetics --- CONFORMATION --- FLOW BIREFRINGENCE --- KERR EFFECT (ELECTROOPTICAL) --- POLYMERS --- OPTICAL PROPERTIES
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Sight is the dominant sense of mankind to apprehend the world at the earth scale and beyond the frontiers of the infinite, from the nanometer to the incommensurable. Primarily based on sunlight and natural and artificial light sources, optics has been the major companion of spectroscopy since scientific observation began. The invention of the laser in the early sixties has boosted optical spectroscopy through the intrinsic or specific symmetry electronic properties of materials at the multiscale (birefringence, nonlinear and photonic crystals), revealed by the ability to monitor light polarization inside or on the surface of designed objects. This Special Issue of Symmetry features articles and reviews that are of tremendous interest to scientists who study linear and nonlinear optics, all oriented around the common axis of symmetry. Contributions transverse the entire breadth of this field, including those concerning polarization and anisotropy within colloids of chromophores and metal/semiconducting nanoparticles probed by UV-visible and fluorescence spectroscopies; microscopic structures of liquid–liquid, liquid–gas, and liquid–solid interfaces; surface- and symmetry-specific optical techniques and simulations, including second-harmonic and sum-frequency generations, and surface-enhanced and coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopies; orientation and chirality of bio-molecular interfaces; symmetry breaking in photochemistry; symmetric multipolar molecules; reversible electronic energy transfer within supramolecular systems; plasmonics; and light polarization effects in materials.
Information technology industries --- Computer science --- symmetry breaking --- chiral plasmonics --- non-linear optics --- plasmonic devices --- plasmonic sensing --- plasmonics --- LSPR scattering --- polarisation manipulation --- metamaterials --- Faraday effect (rotation) --- magneto-optic Kerr effect (MOKE) --- magnetoplasmonics --- molecular orientation --- spectral unmixing --- infrared absorption --- visible-infrared sum-frequency generation --- Raman scattering --- linear programming --- centrosymmetry --- spectroscopy --- selection rules --- infrared --- Raman --- sum-frequency generation --- interfaces --- molecules --- nanoparticles --- molecular aggregates --- second harmonic generation --- hyper rayleigh scattering --- second harmonic scattering --- light polarizatio --- quantum dots --- phenyl derivative --- UV–Visible spectroscopy --- sum-frequency generation spectroscopy --- dipole–dipole interaction --- polyoxometalates --- donor/acceptor substituents --- first hyperpolarizability --- (time-dependent) DFT --- n/a --- UV-Visible spectroscopy --- dipole-dipole interaction
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This reprint focuses on fundamentals and applied research on magnetic structures with curved geometries. The influence of curvature in the magnetic structures is an appealing topic of research opening novel perspectives to engineer the magnetic textures and the magnetisation reversal processes. Special attention is given to the fabrication and optimisation of magnetic structures, their characterisation and possible use in technological applications.
soft magnetic materials --- amorphous magnetic wires --- magnetic domains --- magneto-optic Kerr effect --- giant magnetoimpedance effect --- magnetic anisotropy --- 3D nanowire networks --- spin caloritronics --- thermoelectricity --- spintronics --- giant magnetoresistance multilayers --- glass-coated microwires --- micromagnetic structure --- impedance --- magnetic permeability --- nanomagnetism --- focused-electron-beam-induced deposition --- nanofabrication --- nanolithography --- magnetic nanowires --- three-dimensional --- core-shell --- purification --- thermal annealing --- electron holography --- cylindrical magnetic nanowires --- magnetocrystalline anisotropy --- magnetochiral configurations --- micromagnetic modeling --- amorphous microwires --- high-frequency magnetoimpedance --- SOLT calibration --- nanoporous anodic alumina template --- electrodeposition --- ALD --- magnetic nanowire and nanotube --- core/shell nanostructure --- FORC analysis --- MOKE --- magnetization reversal --- n/a
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Sight is the dominant sense of mankind to apprehend the world at the earth scale and beyond the frontiers of the infinite, from the nanometer to the incommensurable. Primarily based on sunlight and natural and artificial light sources, optics has been the major companion of spectroscopy since scientific observation began. The invention of the laser in the early sixties has boosted optical spectroscopy through the intrinsic or specific symmetry electronic properties of materials at the multiscale (birefringence, nonlinear and photonic crystals), revealed by the ability to monitor light polarization inside or on the surface of designed objects. This Special Issue of Symmetry features articles and reviews that are of tremendous interest to scientists who study linear and nonlinear optics, all oriented around the common axis of symmetry. Contributions transverse the entire breadth of this field, including those concerning polarization and anisotropy within colloids of chromophores and metal/semiconducting nanoparticles probed by UV-visible and fluorescence spectroscopies; microscopic structures of liquid–liquid, liquid–gas, and liquid–solid interfaces; surface- and symmetry-specific optical techniques and simulations, including second-harmonic and sum-frequency generations, and surface-enhanced and coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopies; orientation and chirality of bio-molecular interfaces; symmetry breaking in photochemistry; symmetric multipolar molecules; reversible electronic energy transfer within supramolecular systems; plasmonics; and light polarization effects in materials.
symmetry breaking --- chiral plasmonics --- non-linear optics --- plasmonic devices --- plasmonic sensing --- plasmonics --- LSPR scattering --- polarisation manipulation --- metamaterials --- Faraday effect (rotation) --- magneto-optic Kerr effect (MOKE) --- magnetoplasmonics --- molecular orientation --- spectral unmixing --- infrared absorption --- visible-infrared sum-frequency generation --- Raman scattering --- linear programming --- centrosymmetry --- spectroscopy --- selection rules --- infrared --- Raman --- sum-frequency generation --- interfaces --- molecules --- nanoparticles --- molecular aggregates --- second harmonic generation --- hyper rayleigh scattering --- second harmonic scattering --- light polarizatio --- quantum dots --- phenyl derivative --- UV–Visible spectroscopy --- sum-frequency generation spectroscopy --- dipole–dipole interaction --- polyoxometalates --- donor/acceptor substituents --- first hyperpolarizability --- (time-dependent) DFT --- n/a --- UV-Visible spectroscopy --- dipole-dipole interaction
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