Lecture 1. Mar 21 Wed 2:30-3:30
Classical X-ray scattering and the static structure factor
Lecture 2. Mar 23 Fri 2:30-3:30
Neutron scattering and dynamical structure factor
Lecture 3. Mar 26 Mon 2:30-3:30
Linear response theory and retarded commutators
Lecture 4. Mar 28 Wed 2:30-3:30
Ideal Bose gas and Bogoliubov theory of uniform interacting Bose gas
Lecture 5. Mar 30 Fri 2:30-3:30
Basic introduction to the dilute trapped Bose gas
Lecture 6. Apr 2 Mon 2:30-3:30
A few experiments and some more exotic condensates
Lecture 7. Apr 4 Wed 2:30-3:30
Vortices in rotating and non-rotating condensates
Place: Conference Hall 104, Science Building
Introduction to Speaker:
Professor Alexander Fetter received his Ph.D in Physics at Harvard University in 1963 and then spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California Berkeley. He joined the faculty at Stanford University in 1965 and has been there since then. He has served as chair of the physics department and the director of the Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory and the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials. His research interests include low-temperature quantum fluids, superconductivity and ultracold atomic gases. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and American Association for the Advancement of Science. With J. D. Walecka, he wrote a very popular many-body physics book “Quantum Theory of Many-Particle Systems ” and a mechanics book “Theoretical Mechanics of Particles and Continua”.