This book provides a concise but thorough introduction to important phenomena of low-temperature physics. It is ideally suited as a textbook for advanced undergraduates but will also be valuable for graduate students, scientists and engineers working in this field. Clear explanations of both theoretical and experimental approaches coupled with carefully selected problems will enable students to gain a firm understanding of even the most recent research developments.
This book provides a concise but thorough introduction to the most important phenomena of low-temperature physics. It is ideally suited as a textbook for advanced undergraduates but will also be valuable for graduate students, scientists and engineers working in this field. Clear explanations of both theoretical and experimental approaches coupled with carefully selected problems will enable students to gain a firm understanding of even the most recent research developments.
Christian Enss
Low-temperature phenomena in solids Low-temperature physics Low-temperature techniques Quantum fluids Superconductors development physics technology
Low Temperature Physics is unique in the breadth of topics covered in one text and the extent to which it emphasizes the interconnectedness of various subjects, which is frequently lost in this age of specialization. Christian Enss and Siegfried Hunklinger have written an extremely readable book... [T]he book treats well the classical topics of the field of low-temperature physics, and it does an excellent job in about 550 pages... [M]uch is to be learned from Enss and Hunklinger's book. And students who read Low Temperature Physics will benefit from it.
--Allen Goldman, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, in Physics Today, July 2006