Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2007.– 706 p. – ISBN: 978-3-540-72599-2
The reader is holding the first volume of a three-volume textbook on solidstate physics.The main motivation for the publication of lecture notes as a book was that none of the truly numerous textbooks covered all those areas that felt should be included in a multi-semester course. Especially, if the course strives to present solid-state physics in a unified structure, and aims at discussing not only classic chapters of the subject matter but also (in more or less detail) roblems that are of great interest for today’s researcher as well.
Besides, the book presents a much larger material than what can be covered in a two- or three-semester course. In the first part of the first volume the analysis of crystal symmetries and structure goes into details that certainly cannot be included in a usual course on solid-state physics. The same applies, among others, to the discussion of the methods used in the determination of band structure, the properties of Fermi liquids and non-Fermi liquids, and the theory of unconventional superconductors in the second and third volumes. These parts can be assigned as supplemen.
The Structure of Condensed Matter
The Building Blocks of Solids
Bonding in Solids
Symmetries of Crystals
Consequences of Symmetries
The Structure of Crystals
Methods of Structure Determination
The Structure of Real Crystals
The Structure of Noncrystalline Solids
Dynamics of Crystal Lattices
The Quantum Theory of Lattice Vibrations
The Experimental Study of Phonons
Magnetically Ordered Systems
Elementary Excitations in Magnetic Systems
Appendices
Physical Constants and Units
The Periodic Table of Elements
Mathematical Formulas
Fundamentals of Group Theory
Scattering of Particles by Solids
The Algebra of Angular-Momentum and Spin Operators