Advances In Nuclear Dynamics - Proceedings Of The 9th Winter Workshop On Nuclear Dynamics

Advances In Nuclear Dynamics - Proceedings Of The 9th Winter Workshop On Nuclear Dynamics
Author: Birger Back
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1993-12-22
Genre:
ISBN: 9814552356

This volume provides a survey of recent experimental and theoretical developments in the rapidly expanding field of heavy ion physics. Prominent experts describe the recent advances from the dynamics of dissipative processes around the Coulomb barrier at the low end of the energy scale all the way up to the physics of the quark-gluon plasma.

Corinne 90

Corinne 90
Author: D. Ardouin
Publisher: World Scientific Publishing Company
Total Pages: 492
Release: 1990
Genre: Science
ISBN:

Research in Computer and Robot Vision is directed toward researchers and graduate students in the field of computer vision. A broad spectrum of recent research is presented including sensing and navigation for mobile robots, the extraction of lines, curves, surfaces, and skeletons from intensity images and range images, human motion, and feature extraction. Three applied research projects are presented on the topics of handwriting recognition, automatic understanding of technical drawings, and the collection and interpretation of 3-D images for use in dentistry. These papers dramatically illustrate the breadth of implications of the use of computer vision in industrial, social, and even medical arenas.

The Nucleus

The Nucleus
Author: F.D. Smit
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 540
Release: 1999
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9780306463020

Proceedings of the International Conference on The Nucleus: New Physics for the New Millennium, held January 18-22, 1999, at the National Accelerator Centre, Faure, South Africa

New Directions in Atomic Physics

New Directions in Atomic Physics
Author: C.T. Whelan
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 392
Release: 1999-09-30
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780306461811

The last few years have seen some remarkable advances in the understanding of atomic phenomena. It is now possible to isolate atomic systems in traps, measure in coincidence the fragments of collision processes, routinely produce, and study multicharged ions. One can look at bulk matter in such a way that the fundamental atomic character is clearly evident and work has begun to tease out the properties of anti matter. The papers in this book reflect many aspects of modem Atomic Physics. They correspond to the invited talks at a conference dedicated to the study of "New Directions in Atomic Physics," which took place in Magdalene College, Cambridge in July of 1998. The meeting was designed as a way of taking stock of what has been achieved and, it was hoped, as a means of stimulating new research in new areas, along new lines. Consequently, an effort was made to touch on as many directions as we could in the four days of the meeting. We included some talks which overviewed whole subfields, as well as quite a large number of research contributions. There is a unity to Physics and we tried to avoid any artificial division between theory and experiment. We had roughly the same number of talks from those who are primarily concerned with making measurements, and from those who spend their lives trying to develop the theory to describe the experiments.