Physics of solitons

Dauxois, Thierry

Physics of solitons - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. - xi, 422p.; pbk; 24cm

Includes reference and index

Solitons are waves with exceptional stability properties which appear in many areas of physics. The basic properties of solitons are introduced here using examples from macroscopic physics (e.g. blood pressure pulses and fibre optical communications). The book then presents the main theoretical methods before discussing applications from solid state or atomic physics such as dislocations, excitations in spin chains, conducting polymers, ferroelectrics and Bose–Einstein condensates. Examples are also taken from biological physics and include energy transfer in proteins and DNA fluctuations. Throughout the book the authors emphasise a fresh approach to modelling nonlinearities in physics. Instead of a perturbative approach, nonlinearities are treated intrinsically and the analysis based on the soliton equations introduced in this book. Based on the authors' graduate course, this textbook gives an instructive view of the physics of solitons for students with a basic knowledge of general physics, and classical and quantum mechanics.

https://www.cambridge.org/in/academic/subjects/physics/nonlinear-science-and-fluid-dynamics/physics-solitons?format=HB&isbn=9780521854214

9780521143608


Non topological solitons
Topological solitons
Solid state
Atomic physics
Physical solitons

530.14 / DAU


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