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Conclusions

In this thesis I have attempted to relate the structural, thermodynamic and dynamic behaviour of simple atomic clusters to the underlying PES and the form of the potential. This has led to the following accomplishments:

The work presented here also suggests a considerable number of applications, extensions and fresh challenges. As is often the case, the more we know the more we realize our ignorance.

Although this thesis has concentrated on the properties of clusters, the ubiquity of PES's means that some of the ideas contained here are relevant to a much wider domain. For example, in Chapter 5, I attempted to make detailed connections between the behaviour of clusters, proteins and glasses. Furthermore, I hope the allusions and asides to seemingly unrelated subjects, such as polytopes in 4D space, the optimal shapes of the bubbles in an idealized head of beer and the heptagonal barrel-shaped chaperones that assist the folding of proteins, have illustrated the rich and interdisciplinary nature of research into clusters. Moreover, I hope this thesis has shown the utility of simple models that capture aspects of the essential physics in providing a framework for understanding a diverse range of behaviour. Indeed, the complexity that emerges from these simple models is quite remarkable. Do complex systems, such as these, herald, as some have suggested, the dawn of a post-reductionist science? Certainly, a cluster is much more than just a collection of atoms.


next up previous contents
Next: References Up: The Structure, Thermodynamics and Previous: Pathways for Lennard-Jones Clusters Home: Return to my homepage
Jon Doye
8/27/1997