seriously disabled Posted January 7, 2010 Posted January 7, 2010 In the journal physical review B, there is a section devoted to "Inhomogenous, disordered and partially ordered systems". Could someone please explain to me what each of them means?
timo Posted January 7, 2010 Posted January 7, 2010 Without knowing it: Phys Rev B is solid state physics (very ordered systems) and material sciences (any materials?). I'd guess that this section then is for what goes into the so-called "soft matter" direction, say polymer physics, glasses, maybe even fluids.
seriously disabled Posted January 7, 2010 Author Posted January 7, 2010 Without knowing it: Phys Rev B is solid state physics (very ordered systems) and material sciences (any materials?). I'd guess that this section then is for what goes into the so-called "soft matter" direction, say polymer physics, glasses, maybe even fluids. So an ordered system is any system which is arranged in a crystal lattice and a non-ordered system is any system which is not a crystal lattice?
timo Posted January 7, 2010 Posted January 7, 2010 It's definitely not what I said. And I don't think it is true, either. I do not think there is a formal physical definition of "order" and "disorder" without at least some system-dependent context. What I said is that I think the section probably encompasses stuff like polymers which are arguably less ordered than a crystal lattice. It also makes kind of sense to keep the section descriptions a bit vague. The journal's aim is to publish new discoveries, after all. And keep in mind that it was just a guess of mine.
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