Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Livres anciens et modernes

Bardeen, J., L. N. Cooper & J. R. Schrieffer.

MICROSCOPIC THEORY OF SUPERCONDUCTIVITY and THEORY OF SUPERCONDUCTIVITY.

900,00 €

Cellerino Luigi Studio Bibliografico

(Alessandria, Italie)

Demander plus d'informations

Mode de Paiement

Détails

Auteur
Bardeen, J., L. N. Cooper & J. R. Schrieffer.
Edition
First editions.
Description
Original printed wrappers.
Langues
Italien
Premiére Edition
Oui

Description

In THE PHYSICAL REVIEW, second series, vol. 106, n. 1, pp.162-164 and vol. 108, n. 5, pp. 1175-1204, two entire issues in original wrappers. Very fine copies, ownership signature, minimal defects at spines.
FIRST EDITIONS of these historic papers. "Rapid progress in understanding superconductivity gained momentum in the mid-1950s. It began with the 1948 paper, "On the Problem of the Molecular Theory of Superconductivity",where Fritz London proposed that the phenomenological London equations may be consequences of the coherence of a quantum state. In 1953, Brian Pippard, motivated by penetration experiments, proposed that this would modify the London equations via a new scale parameter called the coherence length. John Bardeen then argued in the 1955 paper, "Theory of the Meissner Effect in Superconductors", that such a modification naturally occurs in a theory with an energy gap. The key ingredient was Leon Neil Cooper's calculation of the bound states of electrons subject to an attractive force in his 1956 paper, "Bound Electron Pairs in a Degenerate Fermi Gas". In 1957 Bardeen and Cooper assembled these ingredients and constructed such a theory, the BCS theory, with Robert Schrieffer. The theory was first published in April 1957 in the letter, "Microscopic theory of superconductivity". The demonstration that the phase transition is second order, that it reproduces the Meissner effect and the calculations of specific heats and penetration depths appeared in the December 1957 article, "Theory of superconductivity".[5] They received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972 for this theory. ( Wikipedia ).
Stroke, pp. 645, 648.