UID:
almahu_9949357433402882
Format:
XIII, 95 p. 7 illus., 5 illus. in color.
,
online resource.
Edition:
1st ed. 2022.
ISBN:
9783031098956
Series Statement:
SpringerBriefs in Physics,
Content:
This book surveys the science at a semipopular, Scientific American-level. It is even-handed with regard to competing directions of research and philosophical positions. It is hard to get even two people to agree on anything, yet a million billion water molecules can suddenly and abruptly coordinate to lock themselves into an ice crystal or liberate one another to billow outwards as steam. The marvelous self-organizing capacity of matter is one of the central and deepest puzzles of physics, with implications for all the natural sciences. Physicists in the past century have found a remarkable diversity of phases of matter-and equally remarkable commonalities within that diversity. The pace of discovery has, if anything, only quickened in recent years with the appreciation of quantum phases of matter and so-called topological order. The study of seemingly humdrum materials has made contact with the more exotic realm of quantum gravity, as theorists realize that the spacetime continuum may itself be a phase of some deeper and still unknown constituents. These developments flesh out the sometimes vague concept of the emergence-how exactly it is that complexity begets simplicity.
Note:
1. Just a Phase They're Going Through-Landau's Theory of Phase Transitions. 2. Tipping the Scales -- 3. Quantum Physics -- 4. Frozen Yet Mobile-Superconductors, Bose-Einstein Condensates and Strange Metals -- 5. 'Twistronics'-Graphene's Magic Angle.
In:
Springer Nature eBook
Additional Edition:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783031098949
Additional Edition:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783031098963
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-031-09895-6
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09895-6
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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