SUBJECT

Title

Applied physics: synthesis

Type of instruction

lecture

Level

master

Part of degree program
Credits

2

Recommended in

Semester 1

Typically offered in

Autumn semester

Course description

Aims: The Applied physics: Synthesis course gives teaching on overview the materials structure and mutual relations between the strutural hierarchy levels. Introducing basic principles of separation and rebuilding, the principle of process-description by changes according to the stages observed. Hierarchy levels of disciplines are connected as systems considering various cross sections of Erath, biosphere, geological actors, chemistry structural levels and life-holding units. Connected hierarchy levels are studies in the soil, in the geological and bio-materials. Measurements are systematized in the frame of hierarchy levels. Material systemetics uses material maps of phases and textures, technology material maps by cooling rate, effects of crystallization, tempering, alloying and various material assembkages. The course overviews the great steps in history of matter (evolution), together with the produced set, energetics and abundances corresponding to the hierarchy levels. some great structure forming events in evolution.

Readings
  • Michael E. McHenry (2012): Structure of Materials: An Introduction to Crystallography, Diffraction and Symmetry. Cambridge University Press; 2 edition (October 8, 2012)
  • Sz. Bérczi, B. Boldoghy, V. Cech, A. Fabriczy, H. Hargitai, S. Hegyi, A. Horváth, Gy. Hudoba, J. Kummert, I. Nehéz, I. Schiller, B. Takács, T. Varga, T. Weidinger. (2009): Systems Woven by Two Flux-Subsystems: One of them is Planetary. Concise Atlas of the Solar System (12): Space Science and Technology. In Lunar and Planetary Science XXXX, #1256, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston
  • Sz. Bérczi, V. Cech, S. Hegyi, A. Sz-Fabriczy, B. Lukács (1998): Technology/environment "chesstable": Cross effects between planetary currents and technologies. In Lunar and Planetary Science XXIX, #1371, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston
  • Carl Sagan (1985): Cosmos. Ballantine Books (October 12, 1985)