Encyclopedia: Polarizability
Polarizability is the relative tendency of a charge distribution, like the electron cloud of an atom or molecule, to be distorted from its normal shape by an external electric field, which may be caus...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polarizability
Jan 23, 2009 MIT Professor Sylvia Ceyer lecture on Polarizability from the course Principles of Chemical Science, Advanced Track.
academicearth.org/lectures/polarizability academicearth.org/lectures/polarizability
Intrinsic Viscosity and the Polarizability of Particles Having a Wide Range of Shapes The electric and magnetic polarizability tensors have independent interest in numerous applications involving the scattering of electromagnetic and pressure waves from objects of general shape.
ciks.cbt.nist.gov/garbocz/paper58/paper58.html
In ordinary usage the term refers to the "mean polarizability", i.e., the average over three rectilinear axes of the molecule. Polarizabilities in different...
www.chemicool.com/definition/polarizability.html www.chemicool.com/definition/polarizability.html
The polarizability of an ion (or an atom) depends largely on how diffuse or Thus their polarizabilities are usually small. Only quite large positive...
chemed.chem.wisc.edu/chempaths/GenChem-Textbook/Polariz... chemed.chem.wisc.edu/chempaths/GenChem-Textbook/Polarizability-859.html
Definition of polarize from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games. Britannica Online Encyclopedia Dictionary Thesaurus Spanish/English Medical...
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/polarize
The reason for this behavior has to do with the very low polarizability of fluorine and a decrease in induced-dipole/induced-dipole forces...
www.chemicalforums.com/index.php?topic=34466.0
Polarizability is the relative tendency of the electron cloud of an atom to be distorted from its normal shape by the presence of a nearby ion or...
genchem.chem.wisc.edu/lab/PTL/ptl/Properties/Polar.html
Charge, Polarizability, and Photoionization of Single Semiconductor Nanocrystals; Todd D. Krauss and Louis E. Brus; Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027; (Received 23 July 1999);
research.radlab.columbia.edu/mrsec/Download/BrusPRL.pdf
Carsten Rockstuhl, Thomas Zentgraf, Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin, Jörg Petschulat, Arkadi Chipouline, Jürgen Kuhl, Thomas Pertsch, Harald Giessen, and Falk Lederer, "The origin of magnetic polarizability in metamaterials at optical frequencies - an electrodynamic approach," Opt.
www.opticsinfobase.org/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-15-14-8871