Abstract
Long before direct experimental studies of the Fermi surfaces of the alkali metals became technically feasible, evidence had accumulated to suggest that their low-lying energy bands are almost free-electron-like. Indeed, the importance of the free-electron model in the development of the theory of metals owes much t o the coincidence that sodium, now known to be the most free-electron-like of all the alkali metals, was the subject of the pioneering cohesive energy calculations of Wigner and Seitz.1

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