ON THE ROLE OF INERTIAL EFFECTS AND DIPOLE DIPOLE COUPLING IN THE THEORY OF THE DEBYE AND FAR-INFRARED ABSORPTION OF POLAR FLUIDS .2. COMPARISON WITH EXPERIMENTAL-OBSERVATIONS

被引:18
作者
COFFEY, WT
CORCORAN, PM
VIJ, JK
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1098/rspa.1987.0092
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
引用
收藏
页码:339 / 388
页数:50
相关论文
共 64 条
[11]  
CHANTRY GW, 1980, IEEE T INSTRUM MEAS, V29, P283
[12]  
Coffey W., 1985, ADV CHEM PHYS, V63, P69
[13]   INERTIA-CORRECTED BUDO TREATMENT OF DIELECTRIC-RELAXATION IN POLAR-MOLECULES - APPLICATION TO THE FIR SPECTRUM OF ACETONITRILE AND HEXANONE-2 [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
CORCORAN, PM ;
VIJ, JK .
CHEMICAL PHYSICS LETTERS, 1986, 129 (04) :375-381
[14]   ON THE EXISTENCE OF FAR-INFRARED ABSORPTION PEAKS IN THE COMPLEX POLARIZABILITY OF THE ITINERANT OSCILLATOR MODEL OF POLAR FLUIDS [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
CORCORAN, PM ;
EVANS, MW .
MOLECULAR PHYSICS, 1987, 61 (01) :15-22
[15]   ON THE ROLE OF INERTIAL EFFECTS AND DIPOLE DIPOLE COUPLING IN THE THEORY OF THE DEBYE AND FAR-INFRARED ABSORPTION OF POLAR FLUIDS [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
CORCORAN, PM ;
EVANS, MW .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 1987, 410 (1838) :61-88
[16]   ON THE BROWNIAN-MOVEMENT OF A ROTATOR IN A COSINE POTENTIAL [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
RYBARSCH, C ;
SCHROER, W .
PHYSICS LETTERS A, 1982, 88 (07) :331-334
[17]   ON THE TIME RESPONSE OF THE ITINERANT OSCILLATOR MODEL OF POLAR FLUIDS [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
PEARCE, JG ;
CALDERWOOD, JH .
ADVANCES IN MOLECULAR RELAXATION AND INTERACTION PROCESSES, 1981, 20 (1-2) :27-45
[18]   PROBABILITY DENSITY FUNCTIONS FOR TRANSLATIONAL ITINERANT OSCILLATOR [J].
COFFEY, WT ;
EVANS, MW .
MOLECULAR PHYSICS, 1978, 35 (04) :975-983
[19]   ON THE CALCULATION OF THE ELECTRIC POLARIZABILITY FOR THE ITINERANT OSCILLATOR MODEL - A COMPARISON OF NUMERICAL FFT TECHNIQUES WITH APPROXIMATE ANALYTICAL FORMULAS [J].
CORCORAN, PM ;
COFFEY, WT ;
EVANS, MW .
MOLECULAR PHYSICS, 1987, 61 (01) :1-14
[20]  
CORCORAN PM, 1987, UNPUB MOL PHYS