: The book’s treatment of the Fermi surface is critical for understanding the electrical and magnetic properties of metals.
: It is notoriously difficult for undergraduates. It assumes a strong background in quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics, often requiring students to pick up concepts like the "quantum grand canonical ensemble" on the fly. Ashcroft and Mermin
: In a famous section on superconductivity, the authors describe a superconducting solid as behaving like "one enormous molecule," allowing current to flow without dissipation as a macroscopic manifestation of quantum mechanics. 3. The "Mermin" Factor: Wit and Rigor : The book’s treatment of the Fermi surface
: Only after exhausting these models do they introduce crystal structures, motivating the reader to understand why a periodic potential is the only way to explain things like insulators or the Hall effect. 2. Core Scientific Contributions : In a famous section on superconductivity, the
: They begin with the simplest classical model of metals, showing exactly where it succeeds and where it fails miserably (like predicting heat capacity).
David Mermin is known for his unique writing style—subtle, elegant, and occasionally humorous. This makes the book "extraordinarily readable" for a graduate text.