Recent Episodes
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01. Introduction to Condensed Matter; Einstein Model of Vibrations in Solids
Sep 9, 2014 – 44:41 -
02. Debye Model of Vibrations in Solids; Drude Theory of Electrons in Metals
Sep 9, 2014 – 45:44 -
03. Drude Theory of Electrons in Metals / Sommerfeld (Free Electron) Theory of Electrons in Metals
Sep 9, 2014 – 46:43 -
04. Sommerfeld (Free Electron) Theory of Electrons in Metals
Sep 9, 2014 – 50:26 -
05. Chemistry in a Nutshell
Sep 9, 2014 – 50:37 -
06. Microscopic View of Vibrations in Solids in One Dimension I: The Monatomic Harmonic Chain
Sep 9, 2014 – 48:13 -
07. Microscopic View of Vibrations in Solids in One Dimension II: The Diatomic (Alternating) Harmonic Chain
Sep 9, 2014 – 52:40 -
08. Microscopic View of Electrons in Solids in One Dimension: Tight Binding Chain
Sep 9, 2014 – 50:22 -
09. Geometry of Solids I: Crystal Structure in Real Space
Sep 9, 2014 – 51:55 -
10. Geometry of Solids II: Real Space And Reciprocal Space
Sep 9, 2014 – 51:14 -
11. Reciprocal Space and Scattering
Sep 9, 2014 – 51:54 -
12. Scattering Experiments II
Sep 9, 2014 – 51:55 -
13. Scattering Experiments III
Sep 9, 2014 – 52:02 -
14. Waves in Reciprocal Space
Sep 9, 2014 – 49:55 -
15. Nearly Free Electron Model
Sep 9, 2014 – 50:15 -
16. Band Structure and Optical Properties of Solids
Sep 9, 2014 – 54:08 -
17. Dynamics of Electrons in Bands
Sep 10, 2014 – 54:39 -
18. Semiconductor Devices and Introduction to Magnetism
Sep 10, 2014 – 50:33 -
19. Magnetic Properties of Atoms
Sep 10, 2014 – 51:42 -
20. Collective Magnetism
Sep 10, 2014 – 50:45 -
21. Mean Field Theory and Closing Thoughts
Sep 10, 2014 – 54:41
Recent Reviews
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Spacelover17Excellent set of lectures for an introductory condensed-matter courseI'm going to be taking solid state physics this fall, and while I usually prefer textbooks over lectures, Ashcroft and Mermin is too dense for me to want to read as more than a reference and for the practice problems, and unfortunately MIT OCW doesn't have as much material available for condensed matter as it tends to for other physics courses. I found this lecture series to be very engaging. The professor is funny and he grounds the lectures well in motivation. The book that follows this series best is his own textbook for undergraduates, but it begins with an approach similar to Ashcroft and Mermin (but better, in my opinion) in that he presents improvements to heat capacity models sequentially, showing how each improvement adhered better to data than the previous model. I look forward to continuing his series.
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