Whenever a physicist visits the physics faculty in Dortmund, he/she is
bound to hear the success story of the so-called integrated course, a
four-semester introduction to physics. These lectures are given by two
professors simulta- neously, one experimentalist and one theorist. After
having asked the common question, "How many professors have killed each
other?", the visitor usually realizes that this is an excellent way of
presenting a coherent introductiorl to both experimental and theoretical
physics. We decided to try this concept in an advanced course on
semiconductor physics. At that point the typical student has already had
an introductory course in solid-state physics and solid-state theory.
The aim of the lectures was to repeat some of the most important,
well-known classics of semiconductor optics and transport and eventually
guide the students to topics of current interest in research. When
preparing the lectures, we did not find a textbook addressing all these
aspects: experiment and theory in semiconductor optics and transport-
which made us write this book. This book presents the phenomenology and
a simple, in- tuitive understanding of many effects and, in addition,
attempts to explain the underlying physics on a consistent theoretical
footing. Calculations are presented such that a student should be able
to follow them with a pencil and a piece of paper.