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Spin Dynamics: Basics of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance


by Malcolm H. Levitt

List Price: $85.00
Price: $73.38
You Save: $11.62 (14%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 325600
Studio: Wiley
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 744
Publication Date: April 25, 2008
Publisher: Wiley


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Spin Dynamics: Basics of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Second Edition is a comprehensive and modern introduction which focuses on those essential principles and concepts needed for a thorough understanding of the subject, rather than the practical aspects. The quantum theory of nuclear magnets is presented within a strong physical framework, supported by figures. 

The book assumes only a basic knowledge of complex numbers and matrices, and provides the reader with numerous worked examples and exercises to encourage understanding. With the explicit aim of carefully developing the subject from the beginning, the text starts with coverage of quarks and nucleons and progresses through to a detailed explanation of several important NMR experiments, including NMR imaging, COSY, NOESY and TROSY. 

Completely revised and updated, the Second Edition features new material on the properties and distributions of isotopes, chemical shift anisotropy and quadrupolar interactions, Pake patterns, spin echoes, slice selection in NMR imaging, and a complete new chapter on the NMR spectroscopy of quadrupolar nuclei. New appendices have been included on Euler angles, and coherence selection by field gradients. As in the first edition, all material is heavily supported by graphics, much of which is new to this edition. 

Written for undergraduates and postgraduate students taking a first course in NMR spectroscopy and for those needing an up-to-date account of the subject, this multi-disciplinary book will appeal to chemical, physical, material, life, medical, earth and environmental scientists. The detailed physical insights will also make the book of interest for experienced spectroscopists and NMR researchers. 

• An accessible and carefully written introduction, designed to help students to fully understand this complex and dynamic subject

• Takes a multi-disciplinary approach, focusing on basic principles and concepts rather than the more practical aspects

• Presents a strong pedagogical approach throughout, with emphasis placed on individual spins to aid understanding

• Includes numerous worked examples, problems, further reading and additional notes

Praise from the reviews of the First Edition:

"This is an excellent book... that many teachers of NMR spectroscopy will cherish... It deserves to be a ‘classic’ among NMR spectroscopy texts." NMR IN BIOMEDICINE

"I strongly recommend this book to everyone…it is probably the best modern comprehensive description of the subject." ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE, INTERNATIONAL EDITION



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 6 reviews)

Spin Dynamics  
It's excellent. Starts from the basic to more complex matters in a very friendly way.
January 21, 2008

Very Informative  
Coming from a purely Physics background, this book is great at explaining in simple English without sounding like it is talking to a complete idiot. I don't appreciate books that are condescending, and this one is not. Very good, well written, and highly recommended!
January 04, 2007

It is bible for understand NMR  
It is a distinguished book for beginer to under stand NMR from theory to experiment step by step.
November 10, 2006

Good NMR text  
This is an excellent text book written by a chemist. Author handles some of hardware stuff as well as physical chemistry of NMR based on quantum mechanics. This text provides us with clear pictures of NMR phenomena. Some detailed explanations about basic NMR pulse sequences are excellent for everybody who studies this field.
October 05, 2004

A must have for any aspiring NMR jockeys  
For those studying biomolecules with NMR, the unofficial bible is of course the maroon colored Cavanagh book. Though this is an excellent book, it isn't the best suited book for beginners. This is where Levitt's book comes in: this is by far the kindest introduction to NMR that I have seen, with heavy emphasis on understanding the concepts first and the formalism later. The book is full of useful diagrams, detailed analogies, and exercises for the reader where other books only show equations. So borrows someone's Cavanagh first, and if you get stuck after 20 pages then order yourself a copy of Levitt and you won't be disappointed. If you already have studied NMR and are looking at how to apply it to proteins, then Cavanagh should suit you fine.
January 18, 2004


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

Understanding NMR Spectroscopy
by James Keeler

Protein NMR Spectroscopy: Principles and Practice
by John Cavanagh, Wayne J. Fairbrother, III, Arthur G. Palmer, Nicholas J. Skelton, Mark Rance

200 and More NMR Experiments: A Practical Course
by Stefan Berger, Siegmar Braun

NMR: The Toolkit (Oxford Chemistry Primers, 92)
by P. J. Hore, J. A. Jones, S. Wimperis

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (Oxford Chemistry Primers, 32)
by P. J. Hore

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