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![]() | Optical Materials by Joseph Simmons, Kelly S. Potter ISBN-10: 9780126441406 ISBN-10: 0-12-644140-5 ISBN-13: 9780126441406 ISBN-13: 978-0-12-644140-6 Hardcover 2000-01-15 Academic Press Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Product Description This book presents, in a unified form, the underlying physical and structural processes that determine the optical behavior of materials. It does this by combining elements from physics, optics, and materials science in a seamless manner, and introducing quantum mechanics when needed. The book groups the characteristics of optical materials into classes with similar behavior. In treating each type of material, the text pays particular attention to atomic composition and chemical makeup, electronic states and band structure, and physical microstructure so that the reader will gain insight into the kinds of materials engineering and processing conditions that are required to produce a material exhibiting a desired optical property. The physical principles are presented on many levels, including a physical explanation, followed by formal mathematical support and examples and methods of measurement. The reader may overlook the equations with no loss of comprehension, or may use the text to find appropriate equations for calculations of optical properties. * Presents the optical properties of metals, insulators, semiconductors, laser materials, and non-linear materials * Physical processes are discussed and quantified using precise mathematical treatment, followed by examples and a discussion of measurement methods * Authors combine many years of expertise in condensed matter physics, classical and quantum optics, and materials science * The text is written on many levels and will benefit the novice as well as the expert * Explains the concept of color in materials * Explains the non-linear optical behavior of materials in a unified form * Appendices present rigorous derivations | ||
Reviews | ||
Too many errors This book is ambitious in its scope. However it is near abysmal in its editing. There are dozens of errors in the equations and some in the text. Derivations were not checked with original sources and so contain assumptions that are not valid in all cases. As an overall introduction to optical materials this book is OK, but don't rely on it for equations if your job (or your grade) depends on it. | ||