Microscopic dynamics in liquid metals: the experimental point of view
Tullio Scopigno, Giancarlo Ruocco, Francesco Sette

TL;DR
This review discusses recent experimental advances and theoretical models in understanding the microscopic dynamics of liquid metals, highlighting developments in inelastic scattering techniques and their implications for atomic motion analysis.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of experimental progress with neutron and X-ray scattering, alongside new theoretical approaches including generalized hydrodynamics and ionic plasma theory.
Findings
Development of X-ray inelastic scattering revealing new energy-momentum regions
Application of mode coupling and kinetic theories to liquid metal dynamics
Discussion of open problems like anomalous acoustic dispersion
Abstract
The experimental results relevant for the understanding of the microscopic dynamics in liquid metals are reviewed, with special regards to the ones achieved in the last two decades. Inelastic Neutron Scattering played a major role since the development of neutron facilities in the sixties. The last ten years, however, saw the development of third generation radiation sources, which opened the possibility of performing Inelastic Scattering with X rays, thus disclosing previously unaccessible energy-momentum regions. The purely coherent response of X rays, moreover, combined with the mixed coherent/incoherent response typical of neutron scattering, provides enormous potentialities to disentangle aspects related to the collectivity of motion from the single particle dynamics. If the last twenty years saw major experimental developments, on the theoretical side fresh ideas came up to the…
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