Positrons in Solids

Positrons in Solids
Author: P. Hautojärvi
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 364281316X

In condensed matter initially fast positrons annihilate after having reached equi librium with the surroundings. The interaction of positrons with matter is governed by the laws of ordinary quantum mechanics. Field theory and antiparticle properties enter only in the annihilation process leading to the emergence of energetic photons. The monitoring of annihilation radiation by nuclear spectroscopic methods provides valuable information on the electron-positron system which can directly be related to the electronic structure of the medium. Since the positron is a positive electron its behavior in matter is especially interesting to solid-state and atomic physi cists. The small mass quarantees that the positron is really a quantum mechanical particle and completely different from any other particles and atoms. Positron physics started about 25 years ago but discoveries of new features in its interac tion with matter have maintained continuous interest and increasing activity in the field. Nowadays it is becoming part of the "stock-in-trade" of experimental physics.

Positron Spectroscopy of Solids

Positron Spectroscopy of Solids
Author: Alfredo Dupasquier
Publisher: IOS Press
Total Pages: 830
Release: 1995
Genre: Electronic structure
ISBN: 9789051992038

The lifetime of a positron inside a solid is normally less than a fraction of nanosecond. This is a very short time on a human scale, but is long enough to enable the positron to visit an extended region of the material, and to sense the atomic and electronic structure of the environment. Thus, we can inject a positron in a sample to draw from it some signal giving us information on the microscopic properties of the material. This idea has been successfully developed in a number of positron-based techniques of physical analysis, with resolution in energy, momentum, or position. The complex of these techniques is what we call now positron spectroscopy of solids. The field of application of the positron spectroscopy extends from advanced problems of solid-state physics to industrial applications in the area of characterization of high-tech materials. This volume focuses the attention on the physics that can be learned from positron-based methods, but also frames those methods in a wider context including other experimental approaches. It can be considered as a textbook on positron spectroscopy of solids, the sort of book that the newcomer takes for his approach to this field, but also as a useful research tool for the expert.

Near-Surface Depth Profiling of Solids by Mono-Energetic Positrons

Near-Surface Depth Profiling of Solids by Mono-Energetic Positrons
Author: Bichitra Nandi Ganguly
Publisher: Trans Tech Publications Ltd
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2012-09-19
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3038134503

Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters BCI (WoS). This work reflects the wide and fascinating range of fields to which positrons have made important contributions. This covers, in particular, the development of low-energy (eV-keV) beams of essentially mono-energetic positrons, in the late 1960s, which opened the door to an even wider range of fundamental and technological studies: from surface physics to polymer films. In her introduction Professor Ganguly offers some background knowledge on the extent to which positrons have influenced and contributed to work in numerous fields.

Positron Annihilation in Semiconductors

Positron Annihilation in Semiconductors
Author: Reinhard Krause-Rehberg
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 408
Release: 1999
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9783540643715

This comprehensive book reports on recent investigations of lattice imperfections in semiconductors by means of positron annihilation. It reviews positron techniques, and describes the application of these techniques to various kinds of defects, such as vacancies, impurity vacancy complexes and dislocations.