Home Browse by Subject Bestsellers New Titles Editor's Choice New Reviews Textbooks
Search Book Series Study Guides Rights Inspection Copy Contact Us Join Our Mailing List
For Authors How to Order E-Catalogues

Browse all Subjects
Search Bookshop
New Titles
Editor's Choice
Bestsellers
Book Series
Textbooks
Journals
Join Our Mailing List
 
POINT GROUPS, SPACE GROUPS, CRYSTALS, MOLECULES

by R Mirman

Preface (554k)
Table of Contents (1,714k)
Chapter 1: Transformations with a Point Fixed: Point Groups
Chapter 1.1: Symmetries of Space and of Objects (188k)
Chapter 1.2: Why Structures of Crystals and Molecules are Limited(301k)
Chapter 1.3: Lattices (281k)
Chapter 1.4: The Rotation Group and Its Finite Sub-Groups (1,569k)
Chapter 1.5: How Translations Limit Rotation Groups of Crystals (210k)

This book is by far the most comprehensive treatment of point and space groups, and their meaning and applications. Its completeness makes it especially useful as a text, since it gives the instructor the flexibility to best fit the class and goals. The instructor, not the author, decides what is in the course. And it is the prime book for reference, as material is much more likely to be found in it than in any other book; it also provides detailed guides to other sources.

Much of what is taught is folklore, things everyone knows are true, but (almost?) no one knows why, or has seen proofs, justifications, rationales or explanations. (Why are there 14 Bravais lattices, and why these? Are the reasons geometrical, conventional or both? What determines the Wigner–Seitz cells? How do they affect the number of Bravais lattices? Why are symmetry groups relevant to molecules whose vibrations make them unsymmetrical? And so on). Here these analyses are given, interrelated, and in-depth. The understanding so obtained gives a strong foundation for application and extension. Assumptions and restrictions are not merely made explicit, but also emphasized.

In order to provide so much information, details and examples, and ways of helping readers learn and understand, the book contains many topics found nowhere else, or only in obscure articles from the distant past. The treatment is (often completely) different from those elsewhere. At least in the explanations, and usually in many other ways, the book is completely new and fresh. It is designed to inform, educate and make the reader think. It strongly emphasizes understanding.

The book can be used at many levels, by many different classes of readers — from those who merely want brief explanations (perhaps just of terminology), who just want to skim, to those who wish the most thorough understanding.


Contents:

  • Transformations with a Point Fixed: Point Groups
  • Crystal Structures and Bravais Lattices
  • Space Groups
  • Representations of Translation Groups
  • Representations: Point Groups and Projective
  • Induced Representations
  • Representations of Space Groups
  • Spin and Time Reversal
  • Tensors, Groups and Crystals
  • Groups, Vibrations, Normal Modes
  • Bands, Bonding, and Phase Transitions
  • Symbols and Definitions
  • The Point Groups
  • Objects Invariant Under the Point Groups
  • Two-Dimensional Space Groups
  • Point Group Character Tables


Readership: Physicists, condensed matter scientists, (theoretical) chemists, crystallographers, mathematicians (especially group theorists and geometers), and students.

744pp Pub. date: May 1999
ISBN 978-981-02-3732-5
981-02-3732-4
US$68 / £45
This is a Print On Demand title. We no longer stock the original but will recreate a copy for you. While all efforts are made to ensure that quality is the same as the original, there may be differences in some areas of the design and packaging.

Request for inspection copy



Copyright © 2008 World Scientific Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Updated on 12 May 2008