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Author(s): David W. Ball
Published: 2012
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Abstract
This section contains the bibliography, index, and author's bio.

Bibliography

1 

Ball D. W., The Basics of Spectroscopy, SPIE Press, Bellingham, WA (2001). Google Scholar

2 

Ball D. W., Physical Chemistry, Brooks/Cole, Pacific Grove, CA (2003). Google Scholar

3 

Bernath P. F., Spectra of Atoms and Molecules, Oxford University Press, Oxford (1995). Google Scholar

4 

Cotton F. A., Chemical Applications of Group Theory, 2nd ed.Wiley-Interscience,1971). Google Scholar

5 

Drago R., Physical Methods for Chemists, HBJ/Saunders, Philadelphia, PA (1992). Google Scholar

6 

Graybeal J. D., Molecular Spectroscopy, McGraw-Hill, New York (1998). Google Scholar

7 

Herzberg G., Molecular Structure and Molecular Structure, I, II, and III Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, Princeton, NJ (1967). Google Scholar

8 

Hollas J. M., Modern Spectroscopy, 4th ed.John Wiley and Sons, New York (2004). Google Scholar

9 

Ingle J. D., Crouch S. R., Spectrochemical Analysis, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ (1988). Google Scholar

10 

Skoog D. A., Holler F. J., Nieman T. A., Principles of Instrumental Analysis, 5th ed.Brooks/Cole, Pacific Grove, CA (1998). Google Scholar

11 

Settle F., Handbook of Instrumental Techniques for Analytical Chemistry, Prentice-Hall PTR, Upper Saddle River, NJ (1997). Google Scholar

12 

Smith B. C., Fundamentals of Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (1996). Google Scholar

David W. Ball is a Professor in the Department of Chemistry at Cleveland State University (CSU) in Ohio. He received a Ph.D. in chemistry from Rice University in 1987 and, after post-doctoral research at Rice University and at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in Berkeley, California, joined the faculty at CSU in 1990, rising to the rank of Professor in 2002. He has authored more than 160 publications, equally split between research papers and works of a more educational bent, including five books currently in print (and one more on the way). Dr. Ball’s research interests include low-temperature infrared spectroscopy and computational chemistry. His wife, Gail, is an engineer who keeps him on his toes. His two sons, Stuart and Casey, also keep him on his toes, especially since his older son Stuart is currently (at this writing) experiencing the cataclysmic educational process of Fourth Grade.

Professor Ball has a doppelganger, David W. Ball, who writes historical fiction and lives in the Rocky Mountains. David (the chemistry professor) has read some of David’s (the real author’s) books and has enjoyed them. There is no word if the favor has been returned.

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KEYWORDS
Photoemission spectroscopy

Spectroscopy

Fluorescence spectroscopy

Raman spectroscopy

Near infrared spectroscopy

Light

Signal to noise ratio

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