Background
Nakamura, Hiroki was born on February 4, 1941 in Tokyo, Japan. Son of Kenjiro and Ito Nakamura.
(Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary con...)
Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary concept and phenomenon, constituting a fundamental mechanism of state and phase changes in various dynamical processes of physics, chemistry and biology, such as molecular dynamics, energy relaxation, chemical reaction, and electron and proton transfer. Control of molecular processes by laser fields is also an example of time-dependent nonadiabatic transition. Thus, nonadiabatic transition represents one of the very basic mechanisms of the mutability of the world. This work has been written because the complete analytical solutions to the basic problem have recently been formulated by the author.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/9810247192/?tag=2022091-20
(Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary con...)
Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary concept and phenomenon, constituting a fundamental mechanism of state and phase changes in various dynamical processes of physics, chemistry and biology, such as molecular dynamics, energy relaxation, chemical reaction, and electron and proton transfer. Control of molecular processes by laser fields is also an example of time-dependent nonadiabatic transition. In this new edition, the original chapters are updated to facilitate enhanced understanding of the concept and applications. Three new chapters - comprehension of nonadiabatic chemical dynamics, control of chemical dynamics, and manifestation of molecular functions - are also added.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00G1BJDFA/?tag=2022091-20
Nakamura, Hiroki was born on February 4, 1941 in Tokyo, Japan. Son of Kenjiro and Ito Nakamura.
Bachelor of Science, University Tokyo, 1963. Master of Science, University Tokyo, 1965. Doctor of Philosophy in Chemical Physics, University Tokyo, 1969.
Research associate, U. Tokyo, 1965-1971, 73-74; lecturer, U. Tokyo, 1974-1979; postdoctoral fellow, Ohio State University, Columbus, 1971-1972; postdoctoral fellow, U. Pittsburgh, 1972-1973; associate professor, Tokyo U. Agriculture and Technology, 1979-1981; professor chemical physics, Institute for Molecular Science, Okazaki, Japan, since 1981; director department, Institute for Molecular Science, Okazaki, Japan, since 1991. Committee member International Conference Physics, Electronics and Atomic College, Rome, Chicago, Aarhus, Denmark, 1989-1993.
(Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary con...)
(Nonadiabatic transition is a highly multidisciplinary con...)
Member Physical Society Japan, Chemical Society Japan, Radiation Chemistry Society Japan, American Physical Society, Japan Atomic College Research Association (committees since 1981).
Married Suwako Kawai, May 6, 1967. Children: Minako, Nobuhiro.