9781420044249-1420044249-The Nature of Light: What is a Photon? (Optical Science and Engineering)

The Nature of Light: What is a Photon? (Optical Science and Engineering)

ISBN-13: 9781420044249
ISBN-10: 1420044249
Edition: 1
Author: Chandra Roychoudhuri, A.F. Kracklauer, Kathy Creath
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: CRC Press
Format: Hardcover 452 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781420044249
ISBN-10: 1420044249
Edition: 1
Author: Chandra Roychoudhuri, A.F. Kracklauer, Kathy Creath
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: CRC Press
Format: Hardcover 452 pages

Summary

The Nature of Light: What is a Photon? (Optical Science and Engineering) (ISBN-13: 9781420044249 and ISBN-10: 1420044249), written by authors Chandra Roychoudhuri, A.F. Kracklauer, Kathy Creath, was published by CRC Press in 2008. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other Electrical & Electronics (Engineering, Industrial, Manufacturing & Operational Systems, Light, Physics, Nuclear Physics, Optics) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Nature of Light: What is a Photon? (Optical Science and Engineering) (Hardcover, Used) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Electrical & Electronics books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Focusing on the unresolved debate between Newton and Huygens from 300 years ago, The Nature of Light: What is a Photon? discusses the reality behind enigmatic photons. It explores the fundamental issues pertaining to light that still exist today.

Gathering contributions from globally recognized specialists in electrodynamics and quantum optics, the book begins by clearly presenting the mainstream view of the nature of light and photons. It then provides a new and challenging scientific epistemology that explains how to overcome the prevailing paradoxes and confusions arising from the accepted definition of a photon as a monochromatic Fourier mode of the vacuum. The book concludes with an array of experiments that demonstrate the innovative thinking needed to examine the wave-particle duality of photons.

Looking at photons from both mainstream and out-of-box viewpoints, this volume is sure to inspire the next generation of quantum optics scientists and engineers to go beyond the Copenhagen interpretation and formulate new conceptual ideas about light–matter interactions and substantiate them through inventive applications.

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