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Metin Tolan

    Geschüttelt, nicht gerührt. James Bond im Visier der Physik | 007 in wissenschaftlicher Mission
    Geschüttelt nicht Gerührt
    Manchmal gewinnt der Bessere
    X-ray scattering from soft matter thin films
    Shaken, Not Stirred!
    X-Ray Scattering from Soft-Matter Thin Films
    • 2020

      Shaken, Not Stirred!

      James Bond in the Spotlight of Physics

      • 206 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      How do James Bond’s X-ray glasses work, the ones he uses to see whether the lady at the roulette table has a pistol concealed in her underwear? Is it really possible to launch oneself into the air and catch up with a plane that is free-falling towards the earth? Or to shoot down a helicopter with a pistol? In this lively and informative book, Germany's boldest physics professor Metin Tolan analyses the stunts and gadgets of the 007 films and even answers the question of all questions: Why does Bond drink his vodka martini shaken, not stirred? "So much entertaining science is a rare thing." Spiegel Online

      Shaken, Not Stirred!
    • 2013

      X-Ray Scattering from Soft-Matter Thin Films

      Materials Science and Basic Research

      • 212 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Focusing on the unique properties of soft-matter thin films, this volume explores their significance in materials science and fundamental research. It discusses how the quasi-two-dimensional geometry of liquids and polymers influences their properties and structures. The book highlights x-ray scattering at grazing angles as a crucial technique for investigating these materials at atomic and mesoscopic scales, providing a comprehensive review of the field along with numerous illustrative examples.

      X-Ray Scattering from Soft-Matter Thin Films
    • 1999

      The properties of soft-matter thin films (e.g. liquid films, polymer coatings, Langmuir-Blodgett multilayers) nowadays play an important role in materials science. They are also very exciting with respect to fundamental In thin films, liquids and polymers may be considered as trapped in a quasi-two-dimensional geometry. This confined geometry is expected to alter the properties and structures of these materials considerably. This volume is dedicated to the scattering of x-rays by soft-matter interfaces. X-ray scattering under grazing angles is the only tool to investigating these materials on atomic and mesoscopic length scales. A review of the field is presented with many examples.

      X-ray scattering from soft matter thin films