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Solid State Physics

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This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the field of solid state physics for undergraduate students in physics, chemistry, engineering, and materials science.

826 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1976

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573 people want to read

About the author

Neil W. Ashcroft

5 books3 followers

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5 stars
159 (41%)
4 stars
134 (34%)
3 stars
64 (16%)
2 stars
23 (5%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for DJ.
317 reviews293 followers
May 21, 2010
By far the best of the solid state textbooks I've found. Whereas Kittel hops from model to model with little explanation, Ashcroft devotes entire chapters to the merits and failings of the free electron gas, periodic potentials, mean field theory, and so on. In a field that can seem as arbitrary as the dating preferences of teenage girls, such clarifications are crucial.

Still, Ashcroft does assume a grasp of graduate-level quantum mechanics at times. There's fame, fortune, and wild and sexy physicist parties waiting for he or she who writes a great solid state text accessible to undergrads.
Profile Image for Uau.
9 reviews1 follower
January 7, 2021
Better that Marder but still solid state physics. Does anyone know where I can find the solutions to the problems? Specially to the ones on chapter 22.
Profile Image for Adam Lantos.
48 reviews11 followers
August 22, 2018
This textbook is very pedagogical. Contains thorough explanations and helpful illustrations. It is more verbose than your typical textbook, but nearly everything is explained in a clear way and the author knows when to clarify something.
This gave room to the author to include many of his insights, making this a gem. The authors are so determined to make the reader understand everything that they even include more than one proof for some theorems!

Even with so many modern textbooks on solid state physics coming out, this holds up very well.
(it is also much better than the other standard textbook used in solid state physics undergrad courses by Kittel)
1 review
March 15, 2012
I used this book in an undergraduate course, so we skipped over quite a few sections. It was very difficult to comprehend. I will have to come back and reread this sometime.
Profile Image for Sara Banana.
61 reviews15 followers
January 13, 2023
He llorado en todas y cada una de las páginas (si apruebo le subo a 4 estrellas)

Edit: al final aprobé la asignatura de Física del Estado Sólido, todo gracias a este libro porque mis apuntes eran un desastre y no entendía nada. Gran libro
Profile Image for Adri.
4 reviews
August 20, 2023
Construye conceptos relativamente complejos a partir de física fundamental y se explica muy bien en el proceso, así que es muy accesible para estudiantes con conocimientos básicos de cuántica. A simple vista pudiera parecer que no sintetice bien los conceptos, al ser un libro tan extenso, pero la realidad es que cubre muchos más de los temas necesarios en un curso de Física del Estado Sólido. Es magnífico como libro de consulta para cualquier tema introductorio de física del estado sólido anterior a los años 80.

La única pega es que el libro llega hasta donde llega, pero no le voy a pedir peras al olmo, ni es su objetivo ni es un texto actualizado.

Además, y aquí está el punto de vista más subjetivo de la reseña, cuenta con la ventaja de describir una rama de la física muy bonita :)
Profile Image for Padelis Dallas.
13 reviews11 followers
June 26, 2017
Πολύ καλό βιβλίο για προπτυχιακούς, ειδικά για κρυσταλλικά πλέγματα bravais κλπ
Profile Image for Lukas Primahatva.
4 reviews
May 17, 2018
This book is legendary in the field of solid state physics. A must for those who want to do research in condensed matter physics.
Profile Image for Tim Robinson.
1,095 reviews55 followers
May 24, 2015
This is not a book to be read through in a single sitting! But I did learn a couple of things. Firstly the face centred cubic lattice and the body centred cubic lattice are duals of each other . Secondly, the famous “electron gas” which explains so much about metals (to within an order of magnitude) is very different from a classical gas not because the electrons have electric charge, but because electrons are fermions. This forces all the electrons to have different velocities and that means on average they move a hundred times as fast as you might expect, and this is largely independent of temperature.
Profile Image for Bikash Kanungo.
10 reviews3 followers
March 1, 2020
A lifetime friend for any condensed matter physicist. The sequence of the topics appears to be very thoughtful. Every mathematical result or theory is supported with physical insight and exercise problems. There are some subtleties hidden in long paragraphs or graphs, so it demands the reader to be observant. I personally have felt that I got a good handle of things and made connections with previous concepts after going through the topics for the second time. The exercises are meticulously designed to highlight the validity of the assumptions and to elucidate some pathological cases.
Profile Image for Tim.
13 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2007
Only one edition was made some forty years ago and it's still a go-to book for people in my field.
32 reviews1 follower
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November 22, 2008
This is a classic and with good reason. Getting a bit old nowadays, but it's still really good.
Profile Image for Sara Ghotb.
559 reviews24 followers
December 24, 2022
For condensed matter physicists, this is an indispensable resource.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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