1st Edition

An Introduction to Disorder Entropy, Information, and Morphologies

By Arthur McGurn Copyright 2027
384 Pages 84 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Disorder is everywhere - in alloys, in thermal fluctuations, and in the amorphous structures of glasses. Understanding it is essential to understanding real materials. This book offers an introduction to the physics of disordered systems, from their foundations in entropy and statistical mechanics to modern applications in information and quantum information theory. It begins discussing the... Read more

Chapter 1: Introduction, Chapter 2: Sequences Of Random Numbers, Chapter 3: Disorder In Crystals, Chapter 4: Entropy, Information, And Disorder, Chapter 5: Amorphous Materials: Polymers, Glasses, Amorphous Networks, Quasicrystals, And Tilings, Chapter 6: Annealed Models, The Replica Method, And Spin Glass, Chapter 7: Diffusion, Localization, And Turing Patterns, Chapter 8: An Introduction To Nonlinear Dynamics, Chapter 9: Fractals, Chapter 10: Quantum Monte Carlo Simulation, Chapter 11: Scaling Theory, Chapter 12: Suggested Simple Problems And Computer Projects

Biography

Professor Emeritus Arthur R. McGurn, CPhys, FInstP, is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics, a Fellow of the American Physical Society, a Fellow of Optica (formerly Optical Society of America), a Fellow of the Electromagnetics Academy, and an Outstanding Referee for the journals of the American Physical Society. He received his PhD in Physics in 1975 from the University of California, Santa Barbara, followed by postdoctoral studies at Temple University, Michigan State University, and George Washington University (NASA Langley Research Center). Prof. McGurn’s research interests include the theory of: magnetism in disorder materials, electron conductivity, the properties of phonons, ferroelectrics and their nonlinear dynamics, Anderson localization, amorphous materials, the scattering of light from disordered media and rough surfaces, the properties of speckle correlations of light, quantum optics, nonlinear optics, the dynamical properties of nonlinear systems, photonic crystals, and meta-materials. He has over 150 publications spread amongst these various topics. Since 1981 he has taught physics for 38 years at Western Michigan University where he is currently a Professor Emeritus of Physics and a WMU Distinguished Faculty Scholar. A number of PhD students have graduated from Western Michigan University under his supervision.