Light-Matter Interaction
Atoms and Molecules in External Fields and Nonlinear Optics

1. Edition October 2006
XVI, 309 Pages, Softcover
20 tables
Textbook
Short Description
This book presents the fundamentals of atomic, molecular and optical (AMO) science and engineering. It covers the basics of atoms, diatomic molecules, atoms and molecules in static and electromagnetic fields and nonlinear optics.
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This book draws together the principal ideas that form the basis of atomic, molecular, and optical science and engineering. It covers the basics of atoms, diatomic molecules, atoms and molecules in static and electromagnetic fields and nonlinear optics. Exercises and bibliographies supplement each chapter, while several appendices present such important background information as physics and math definitions, atomic and molecular data, and tensor algebra.
Accessible to advanced undergraduates, graduate students, or researchers who have been trained in one of the conventional curricula of physics, chemistry, or engineering but who need to acquire familiarity with adjacent areas in order to pursue their research goals.
Part 1: Light-Matter Interaction: Atoms, Molecules and External Fields
1. Hydrogen-Like Ion: An Atom (Ion) with One Electron
2. The Structure of the Multielectron Atom
3. Atoms in Static Fields
4. Atoms in AC Fields
5. Diatomic Molecules
6. Molecules in External Fields
Part 2: Light-Matter Interaction: Nonlinear Optics
7. Nonlinear Optics
8. Wave Propagation
9. Quantum Theory
10. Applications
Appendices
A. Atomic Physics Definitions
B. Mathematics Related to AMO Calculations
C. Atomic and Molecular Data
D. Coupling Angular Momenta
E. Tensor Algebra
References
Index
Chi H. Lee received his B.S. degree in electrical engineering from the National Taiwan University in 1959, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in applied physics from Harvard University in 1962 and 1968, respectively. Since 1968 he has been with the University of Maryland, where he is now a Professor Emeritus of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. His areas of research include ultrafast optoelectronics, lasers, electro-optic devices and microwave photonics. Professor Lee is a Fellow of the IEEE, the Optical Society of America and the Photonic Society of Chinese Americans. He served as the Chairman of the IEEE MTT-technical committee for lightwave technology and the Microwave Photonics committee of the IEEE LEOS.