Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
condensed matter physics
German translation:
Festkörperphysik
Added to glossary by
Stefanie Guim Marce
Sep 10, 2005 08:56
18 yrs ago
1 viewer *
English term
condensed matter physics
English to German
Science
Physics
Gibt es für "condensed matter physics" einen deutschen Ausdruck?
Bisher habe ich immer nur den englischen gefunden.
Kontext: Prof. XY machte 1990 seinen Doktor in **condensed matter physics**.
Danke!
Bisher habe ich immer nur den englischen gefunden.
Kontext: Prof. XY machte 1990 seinen Doktor in **condensed matter physics**.
Danke!
Proposed translations
(German)
4 +3 | Festkörperphysik | Oliver Annacker |
4 +2 | kondensierte materie | Alan Johnson |
4 | nur zur Info. | Brie Vernier |
Proposed translations
+3
21 mins
Selected
Festkörperphysik
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Harry Borsje
28 mins
|
agree |
MMUlr
: //Angesichts der weiteren Kommentare und Vorschläge denke ich, man kann durchaus philosophieren, ob das eine oder andere gemeint ist - für diesen Fall bleibe ich bei meinem Agree, Beispiel: http://www.fkp.physik.tu-darmstadt.de/
35 mins
|
agree |
Michael Hesselnberg (X)
1 hr
|
neutral |
Brie Vernier
: das wäre "solid state physics", nur ein Teil der Physik der kondensierten Materie//Tja ... das waren auch nur Menschen, die das zusammengetragen haben ...
1 hr
|
Ja, aber....auch Eurodicautom (zB) sagt "Festkörperphysik" für "condensed matter physics". Eindeutig uneindeutig.
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Das passte hier am besten - nach Rücksprache mit dem Kunden :-)"
+2
2 hrs
kondensierte materie
Schau mal diese Linksammlung bei goggle an:
http://www.google.de/search?hl=de&q="kondensierte materie"&m...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2005-09-10 10:58:37 (GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
D.h. natürlich \"Physik der kondensierte materie\"
http://www.google.de/search?hl=de&q="kondensierte materie"&m...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2005-09-10 10:58:37 (GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
D.h. natürlich \"Physik der kondensierte materie\"
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Brie Vernier
: Physik der kondensierten Materie
14 mins
|
neutral |
Harry Borsje
: care to explain the difference between condensed matter physics and solid state physics (to a physicist)
1 hr
|
If you're a physicist you explain the difference. Mines just an uneducated guess.
|
|
agree |
Michael Pauls
: Mit briethe, auch: Physik kondensierter Materie: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kondensierte_Materie
2 hrs
|
3 hrs
nur zur Info.
Condensed matter physics is by far the largest field of contemporary physics. By one estimate, one third of all American physicists identify themselves as condensed matter physicists. Historically, condensed matter physics grew out of solid-state physics, which is now considered one of its main subfields. The term "condensed matter physics" was apparently coined by Philip Anderson when he renamed his research group - previously "solid-state theory" - in 1967. In 1978, the Division of Solid State Physics at the American Physical Society was renamed as the Division of Condensed Matter Physics.
One of the reasons for calling the field "condensed matter physics" is that many of the concepts and techniques developed for studying solids actually apply to fluid systems. For instance, the conduction electrons in an electrical conductor form a type of quantum fluid with essentially the same properties as fluids made up of atoms. In fact, the phenomenon of superconductivity, in which the electrons condense into a new fluid phase in which they can flow without dissipation, is very closely analogous to the superfluid phase found in helium 3 at low temperatures.
Condensed matter physics is also closely related to the field of materials science. In this context, condensed matter physicists research "Nanotechnology", i.e. the ability to mass produce atomic-scale machines, which was first publicly envisioned by Richard Feynman.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condensed_matter_physics
One of the reasons for calling the field "condensed matter physics" is that many of the concepts and techniques developed for studying solids actually apply to fluid systems. For instance, the conduction electrons in an electrical conductor form a type of quantum fluid with essentially the same properties as fluids made up of atoms. In fact, the phenomenon of superconductivity, in which the electrons condense into a new fluid phase in which they can flow without dissipation, is very closely analogous to the superfluid phase found in helium 3 at low temperatures.
Condensed matter physics is also closely related to the field of materials science. In this context, condensed matter physicists research "Nanotechnology", i.e. the ability to mass produce atomic-scale machines, which was first publicly envisioned by Richard Feynman.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condensed_matter_physics
Discussion