The Cina group focuses on theoretical aspects of ultrafast spectroscopy, primarily in application to molecular systems in condensed phases. Current areas of investigation include:
(i) strategies to elucidate molecular processes in many-body systems triggered and probed by ultrashort laser pulses,
(ii) techniques to prepare and measure quantum super-positions of classically dissimilar vibrational states and the subsequent degradation of their quantum phase coherence, and
(iii) possible approaches to the control of molecular nuclear motion with shaped pulse sequences.
The new techniques and shorter-time domains that are now being explored by ultrafast methods require both conceptual advancesto define precisely the physical content of new kinds of measurementsand the development of practical computational strategies for accurately simulating the molecular-level electronic and nuclear dynamics of many-body systems.
The area of Wavepacket interferometryto which the Cina group has made several recent contributionspresents new opportunities for direct characterization of time-dependent molecular wave functions. In professors Tom Dyke and Andy Marcus, Cina and coworkers are currently implementing these new methods, which rely on subtle quantum mechanical interference effects between different portions of specially prepared molecular states, with the aim of better elucidating optically induced molecular dynamics and electronic energy transfer.
Jeff Cina's Notes on Landau and Lifshitz’s Electrodynamics of Continuous Media
This file contains Jeff Cina's mostly hand-written notes on 6 full chapters from Landau and Lifshitz’s Electrodynamics of Continuous Media. Included are notes for the following chapters:
I. Electrostatics of Conductors
II. Electrostatics of Dielectrics,
IV. Static Magnetic Field
VII. Quasistatic Electromagnetic Field
IX. The Electromagnetic Wave Equations
XVI. Diffraction of X-rays in Crystals
There are also some notes on
ECM Chapter VI. Superconductivity
Sections 23 and 24 of L & L’s Classical Theory of Fields (on The electromagnetic field tensor and Lorentz transformation of the field)
Sections 123 and 124 from L & L’s Statistical Physics, Part 1 (on the generalized susceptibility and the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, respectively)
A Lecture or two from Feynman’s lecture series (including the one on Faraday’s law of induction)
Several chapters from Purcell’s undergraduate E & M book