Abstract

N Austern Chichester: J Wiley 1970 pp ix + 390 price £190 Direct reaction theory is typical of highly developed branches of physics in having grown up pragmatically from the originally rather lighthearted use of a variety of approximate prescriptions which proved apt and indeed very accurate as applied to their respective special problems, for example optical potentials for elastic scattering and distorted wave Born approximation for stripping. Then came the efforts at unification and justification of the methods at a deeper level, which in this case has meant above all drawing the correct division between direct and compound effects.

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